TEKS: Chapter 110. English Language Arts and Reading See All Teacher Resources
110.33.b.25
(25) Listening and Speaking/Speaking. Students speak clearly and to the point, using the conventions of language. Students will continue to apply earlier standards with greater complexity. Students are expected to give a formal presentation that exhibits a logical structure, smooth transitions, accurate evidence, well-chosen details, and rhetorical devices, and that employs eye contact, speaking rate (e.g., pauses for effect), volume, enunciation, purposeful gestures, and conventions of language to communicate ideas effectively.
Aligned Resources
Courses
Teaching Guides
- Teaching A Doll's House: Nora's Secret Diary
- Teaching Life of Pi: From Text to Pictures and Back Again
- Teaching Life of Pi: Book vs. Movie
- Teaching Night: Virtual Field Trip
- Teaching Great Expectations: Ups and Downs: Graphing Pip's Tumultuous Life
- Teaching The Yellow Wallpaper: The Yellow Wallpaper Meets the 21st Century: Writing a Mash-Up
- Teaching Their Eyes Were Watching God: Anthropology 101
- Teaching Their Eyes Were Watching God: Getting Readers Hooked on Hurston
- Teaching Wuthering Heights: Isn't It Byronic?
- Teaching The Old Man and the Sea: Hemingway in Country Music
- Teaching The Story of an Hour: One Hour Literary Analysis
- Teaching The Tell-Tale Heart: Stuck in Medias Res with You
- Teaching The Catcher in the Rye: Judging a Book by Its Cover
- Teaching Inferno: Designing Hell
- Teaching Antigone: Motif Slideshow
- Teaching Brave New World: Aldous Huxley: Oracle or Alarmist?
- Teaching Brave New World: Our Ford, Who art in ... Detroit?
- Teaching Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: The Medieval Coat of Arms
- Teaching Slaughterhouse-Five: Writing a Novel, Vonnegut Style
- Teaching The Awakening: Minor Awakenings: Short Stories Inspired by Minor Characters
- Teaching The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Prologue & Tale: Judging the Knight
- Teaching The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Prologue & Tale: Desperately Seeking Mr. Right (Again)
- Teaching The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Prologue & Tale: "Who Peyntede the Leoun, Tel Me, Who?": Chaucer's Opinion of the Wife
- Teaching The Crucible: Closing Time