Common Core Standards
Grade 5
Reading RL.5.1
Quote accurately from a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text.
This standard is basically a refinement of the skills students should have begun to work on in fourth grade, except instead of more general examples students now have to quote specifically as they explain what they think about a text. The difference between fifth graders and sixth graders is the complexity of their analysis—fifth graders may only use one quote when explaining an idea from a text, while sixth graders are expected to use multiple quotes when explaining one idea.
Aligned Resources
- Teaching Number the Stars: Book of Scraps
- Teaching Number the Stars: What Is It Good For?
- Teaching Charlotte's Web: With a Little Help from Our Friends
- Teaching Seedfolks: Something to Talk About
- Teaching The Invention of Hugo Cabret: A Picture's Worth 200 Words
- Teaching Seedfolks: Hi. Where Are You From?
- Teaching Seedfolks: How Does Your Garden Grow?
- Teaching The Borrowers: If I Could Turn Back Time: A Pre-reading Vocabulary Activity
- Teaching The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle: A Social Class Re-Telling
- Teaching The One and Only Ivan: Wild Animals in Captivity
- Teaching The Phantom Tollbooth: Extra! Extra! Read All About It!
- Teaching The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle: That Was Then, This is Now
- Teaching The Invention of Hugo Cabret: The Automaton's Message
- Teaching The Invention of Hugo Cabret: The Great Debate
- Teaching The Borrowers: Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are!
- Teaching The One and Only Ivan: Words, Words, Words
- Teaching The Phantom Tollbooth: Write to Learn
- Teaching The Secret Garden: Mary and Colin Become Tech Savvy
- Teaching Esperanza Rising: Significance Cereals
- Teaching The Borrowers: Keeping Up With the Korrowers
- Teaching The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle: Mutiny in a Fifth Grade Classroom