Common Core Standards
Grade 8
Reading RI.8.2
Determine a central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including its relationship to supporting ideas; provide an objective summary of the text.
Just like in seventh grade, students have to see how points supporting the central idea add to the central idea, and why the author might have introduced those supporting points in the order they appear in the text. However, because students are now in eighth grade, expect their quality of responses to be higher.
For example, if a question asks how the author develops the central idea that a swallow might be able to carry a coconut from the Tropics, this could be a sample answer: "The author develops the central idea by first proving that a European swallow doesn't have the airspeed velocity required to carry a coconut, then by proving that an African swallow could technically do it (but is non-migratory), and finally by showing that two swallows could technically carry a coconut together."
Example 1
Here's an example lesson to use when students are learning about the American Revolution.
Have students use http://www.paul-revere-heritage.com/index.html to research commonly-held beliefs and the truth about Paul Revere's role in the Revolution. In groups, have students develop the following information: a brief biography, common myths, truths, pictures of Revere or his ride, an analysis explaining why he is typically seen in a more heroic light, and an annotated bibliography explaining why the site is valid.
Note: This lesson also fulfills CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.8.1, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.8.5, and CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.8.6.
Aligned Resources
- Social Studies Online: Digital Literacy Connections to Civics and History: To Speak or Not to Speak… Freely
- Teaching Maniac Magee: City Divided
- Teaching Maniac Magee: Exploring Homelessness
- Teaching Moon Over Manifest: Sliding Through History
- Teaching The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963: Let's Do the Time Warp
- The Basics of Social Media: Facebook Shmoop.0: Managing Your Profile and Privacy
- Teaching Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Integration In Our Nation
- Teaching The View from Saturday: Create Your Own Knowledge Bowl
- Teaching The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Famous Islands
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: A Dream Deferred
- Teaching When You Reach Me: Mysteries of Science
- Teaching A Wrinkle in Time: Right Brain Versus Left Brain
- Teaching The View from Saturday: Getting To Know a Turtle (Almost)
- Teaching Watership Down: Friends (or Carrots) First
- ELA Online: Digital Literacy Connections to English Language Arts: Facebook or Twitter Plot Summary
- Teaching Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: The Rules of Flag Flying (You Read That Right)
- Online Community, Culture, and Citizenship: E-Organizing for A Better World: Internet Activism
- Teaching Moon Over Manifest: HistoryBusters
- Teaching Of Mice and Men: New American Dream
- Teaching The Cay: I Have a Dream
- Teaching The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Sailing Around the World
- Teaching To Kill a Mockingbird: Atticus Finch, Number One Dad
- Teaching Where the Red Fern Grows: Sometheme Sounds Familiar
- Using Copyrighted, Creative Commons, and Public Domain Materials: Is It Legal? Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons