CCSS R3 Events and Sequences in Text
By Jonathan LeMaster on December 9, 2013This week, LiteracyTA has analyzed College and Career Anchor standard R3.
The purpose of analyzing the Common Core literacy standards is to distill them down to a workable list of skills that classroom teachers can teach. Our process can empower teachers with a practical way to break down additional state and local standards/learning outcomes.

Marking the Standard
To break down a standard, start with the Marking a Text analytical reading skill. Circle the directive verbs in the standard and underlined what those verbs say our students need to know and do.
Breaking the Standard into Skills
Once we have isolated the key literacy skills that make up the standard, we can organize them in a simple three column table.
Directive Verb | What students need to do | Literacy Skills in Skill Library |
analyze | how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text. |
Here is another way to visually represent the key literacy skills in the standard.
The College and Career Anchor Standard R3 asks students to analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text. We hope that when we break the standard into manageable parts, it becomes easier to understand and teach.
Common Core Tools
To learn more about teaching standard R3, go to our Common Core Reading section. You can also use our Skill-Based Lesson Planner to plan a lesson that explicitly teaches this standard.
Let us know what you think about our Common Core standard break down. Join the conversation and share this page with others.
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Literacy Standards In Action
We've mapped our literacy lessons and reading, speaking, and writing skills to state standards, Common Core, and NGSS. The standards are "the what" to teach. Our lessons are "the how" to meet the expectations defined by the standards. Click on the links below to view our quick reference table that maps standards to literacy lessons.