TEKS: Chapter 110. English Language Arts and Reading See All Teacher Resources
110.33.b.8
(8) Reading/Comprehension of Informational Text/Culture and History. Students analyze, make inferences and draw conclusions about the author's purpose in cultural, historical, and contemporary contexts and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding. Students are expected to analyze how the style, tone, and diction of a text advance the author's purpose and perspective or stance.
Aligned Resources
Courses
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 4: Transcendentalism 1830 – 1850 Lesson 4: Stick It to "The Man"
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 1: Speaking Against Slavery
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 4: Paving the Way for Abolition of Slavery
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Civil Rights and Multiculturalism in Literature 1960 – Present Lesson 2: Violence or Non-violence?
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Civil Rights and Multiculturalism in Literature 1960 – Present Lesson 1: The Movement
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 1: Colonialism and Exploration 1400 – 1700 Lesson 7: Captive!
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 3: Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 6: Speaking Like a Lawyer
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 7: Goodbye, Fellow Americans
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 8: Benji—The Old Dr. Phil
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 10: What About Me?
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 2: The Liberator
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 5: The Gettysburg Address
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 14: Test Prep: Another Presidential Address
- Course: ELA 11: American Literature, Unit 6: Contemporary Literature 1980 – Present Lesson 11: What We Talk About When We Talk About Tim O'Brien
- Course: American Literature (College), Unit 5: Abolition and Women’s Rights 1820 – 1920 Lesson 9: Solitary Confinement
- Course: American Literature (College), Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 5: Foundational Texts…Literally
- Course: American Literature (College), Unit 2: Rationalism and Independence: 1700 – 1800 Lesson 10: What About Me?
Teaching Guides
- Teaching The Odyssey: The Odyssey in Pictures
- Teaching The Odyssey: Holding Out for a Hero
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: Emmett Till & Tom Robinson
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: A Dream Deferred
- Teaching Night: Tragedy Times Two
- Teaching Number the Stars: Friends, Danes, Countrymen…
- Teaching A Separate Peace: Blitzball for All