Common Core Standards
Grades 11-12
Speaking and Listening SL.11-12.6
SL.11-12.6. Adapt speech to a variety of contexts and tasks, demonstrating a command of formal English when indicated or appropriate.
Yo, listen up! In this standard, students are expected to understand that, at times, formal language is important to the situation, task, purpose, and audience. While students will use a certain speaking style with their friends, students must learn to use academic language in the classroom especially within the context of a whole-class discussion.
Keeping your expectations high for the use of formal language during whole-class discussions will help your students learn to better code-switch; that is, to use language appropriate to the setting and circumstances. Opportunities to develop this skill abound. Students must understand the impact that their mastery of excellent speaking skills has on academic and life-long success. This is a real eye-opener!
Here’s an example that will help them see this:
Teach With Shmoop
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The links in this section will take you straight to the standard-aligned assignments tagged in Shmoop's teaching guides.
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Teaching Guides Using this Standard
- 1984 Teacher Pass
- A Rose For Emily Teacher Pass
- A View from the Bridge Teacher Pass
- Animal Farm Teacher Pass
- Antigone Teacher Pass
- Beowulf Teacher Pass
- Brave New World Teacher Pass
- Death of a Salesman Teacher Pass
- Fahrenheit 451 Teacher Pass
- Fences Teacher Pass
- Frankenstein Teacher Pass
- Grapes Of Wrath Teacher Pass
- Great Expectations Teacher Pass
- Hamlet Teacher Pass
- Julius Caesar Teacher Pass
- King Lear Teacher Pass
- Lord of the Flies Teacher Pass
- Moby Dick Teacher Pass
- Narrative of Frederick Douglass Teacher Pass
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Teacher Pass
- Othello Teacher Pass
- The Aeneid Teacher Pass
- The As I Lay Dying Teacher Pass
- The Canterbury Tales General Prologue Teacher Pass
- The Canterbury Tales: The Miller's Tale Teacher Pass
- The Cask of Amontillado Teacher Pass
- The Catch-22 Teacher Pass
- The Catcher in the Rye Teacher Pass
- The Crucible Teacher Pass
- The Great Gatsby Teacher Pass
- The Iliad Teacher Pass
- The Metamorphosis Teacher Pass
- The Old Man and the Sea Teacher Pass
- Their Eyes Were Watching God Teacher Pass
- Wide Sargasso Sea Teacher Pass
- Wuthering Heights Teacher Pass
Example
Example:
Having just read Their Eyes Were Watching God, you are going to take part in a class discussion. The teacher has put six questions on the overhead, all of which are related to the themes of the story. Here’s how the discussion works:
The teacher reveals the first question. You’ll work with your elbow partner to confer about possible claims, or answers. You notice that the question could be answered with at least three claims. Those English teachers -- their questions are NEVER simple! In addition to the claim, you must also provide some textual evidence followed by analysis of that evidence. What does it all mean?
After four minutes, the question is opened up to the entire class. The teacher asks for one student to offer a claim that answers the question. Then, that student may call on another student, who will give evidence from the text to support the claim. Finally, the second student calls on a third student, who then analyzes the evidence given for the first claim. The cycle begins again when a new claim is presented. Claim, evidence, analysis. Claim, evidence, analysis. You get the picture. This continues until all claims answering that first question have been presented.
Moving on to question number two, then three, then….. You know that at this rate, the discussion will take two days, but, by golly, you’ll know your stuff for the test!
In addition to following this process, you understand that this is a formal discussion. The Pair/Share portion with your elbow partner might be informal, and as such offers you a chance to collect your thoughts. You might use informal, or conversational, language in that one-on-one situation. That’s appropriate. In the whole class discussion, however, formal language is expected and conventions of discussions must be followed. These rules include applying Standard English, using an academic tone, and choosing mature and formal words. Avoid slang. We know that when you’re talking with your friends, you use one type of language. We’re NOT going there. But in the classroom, academic language is the way to go!
Proper discussion etiquette is also required: Address and thank the speaker for calling on you. Listen actively. No side conversations. Electronics are put away. Summarize what you believe you’ve heard from the previous speaker before answering your portion of the question. Offer an alternative viewpoint in a respectful manner.
It might seem rather forced at first, but soon you’ll see that this discussion is interesting and mature. And, you’ve learned a great deal about the novel that you didn’t realize by yourself.
Drill
Create a graphic organizer that explains when formal and informal English language might be used.
Situation | Task | Language Type |
1. | ||
2. | ||
3. | ||
4. | ||
5. |
Situation | Task | Language Type |
1. Third grade language arts class | Tell a story and explain what it means | Informal but with simple vocabulary |
2. A speech before a group of physicians | Explain the results of a new study | Formal with specific vocabulary |
3.Tutoring a peer | Explain the main ideas in a newspaper article | Informal with grade appropriate vocabulary |
4. A classroom of hungry peers | Demonstrate how to make pancakes | Informal with simple vocabulary |
5.Debate competition | Arguing why the death penalty should not be permitted | Formal language with mature vocabulary |
Aligned Resources
- Teaching A View from the Bridge: Talk Show
- Teaching Fences: Making a Collage – Bearden Style
- Teaching King Lear: King Lear Audio Podcast
- Teaching A Tale of Two Cities: Serial Publishing
- Teaching A&P: Back to the Future
- Teaching Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: Huck Finn vs. Video Games
- Teaching All Quiet on the Western Front: Oh The Humanity!
- Teaching An Ideal Husband: Changes from the Get-Go
- Teaching An Ideal Husband: A Hard Knock Life
- Teaching An Ideal Husband: The Importance of Being Equal
- Teaching A Room with a View: A Tour of Italy
- Teaching A Room with a View: His Kiss, His Kiss, Unstoppable
- Teaching Jane Eyre: Making Poetry Out of Cover Art
- Teaching Jane Eyre: Jane Says
- Teaching Kaffir Boy: Personal Narratives About Race
- Teaching Life of Pi: From Text to Pictures and Back Again
- Teaching Life of Pi: Book vs. Movie
- Teaching Moby-Dick: Kill the Whale! Save the Whales!
- Teaching Moll Flanders: What did Defoe do that fo'?
- Teaching Mrs Dalloway: Stream-of-Consciousness Story of an Hour
- Teaching My Ántonia: Picturing Home
- Teaching Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: Poetry Inspired by Douglass’s Narrative
- Teaching Night: Virtual Field Trip
- Teaching Death of a Salesman: Selling the American Dream
- Teaching Don Quixote: Where Are We Going? Where Have We Been?
- Teaching Don Quixote: The Quick and the Dead
- Teaching Frankenstein: Breaking News: Stormy Weather Puts the Science Back in Fiction
- Teaching Great Expectations: Ups and Downs: Graphing Pip's Tumultuous Life
- Teaching Henry IV Part 2: Can Everyone Say "Retread?"
- Teaching The Yellow Wallpaper: The Yellow Wallpaper Meets the 21st Century: Writing a Mash-Up
- Teaching Things Fall Apart: Things May Fall Apart, but Art Connects
- Teaching The Cask of Amontillado: Who...err, Why Dunnit?
- Teaching The Grapes of Wrath: Haunted By the Ghost of Tom Joad: The Enduring Legacy of a Mythic Character
- Teaching The Grapes of Wrath: Images of the "Grape" Depression: A Picture or a Thousand Words?
- Teaching The Scarlet Letter: Book vs. Movie