Overarching Enduring Understanding: Improve student college and workplace readiness in reading



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Unit 6: The Oregon Trail


Course: Reg. American History

Title/Source: The Oregon Trail

Ideas 16-19



Question

Response

Analyze techniques used by the author or a text to reveal or conceal his or her point of view.



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T










Explain in their own words the significance of specific information in written or non-print sources.



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T

Explain the connection the author tries to make between the long trip of the Oregon Trail, disease and accidents, and the amount of supplies each family had to bring







Distinguish between what is most and least important in a text.


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T

What are the most and least important concepts you learned in the article?







Place events from literary text in chronological order by locating substantial evidence from the text.


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T










Identify similarities and differences between people, objects, events or ideas drawing accurate conclusion.


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T










Identify interrelationships between and among people, objects, events or ideas in written or non-print source.


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T

Explain why the Native Americans may have been reluctant to stand up to pioneers as they overran their homelands.







Determine factors that have clearly influence the outcome of a situation.


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T










Identify statements in texts that clearly state the cause(s) and effect(s) of specific effects.


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T

Why were many families so eager to travel to Oregon knowing the trip would be long, hard, and dangerous?







Clarify the meanings of words or descriptive phrases by searching for clues in the text(e.g., sentence structure, context prefixes/suffixes, spelling patterns)

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T










Make accurate generalizations about people and events based on evidence presented in the text.


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T

What specific types of people do you feel would be most eager to travel from Missouri to Oregon during the 1800’s







Identify inaccurate generalizations (e.g., stereotypes) in written or nonprint sources.


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Identify details in a challenging text that confirm or disprove conclusions drawn by the author or narrator and by their students, themselves or their peers.

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Make reasoned judgments about ideas and events based on evidence from written or nonprint sources.


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