Course Description
Students entering eighth grade continue to develop critical thinking skills, problem-solving skills, and creativity. Eighth-grade students should be reading a variety of rich and challenging texts closely, proficiently, and independently. As in previous grades, educators should continue to offer appropriate guidance and support to students as needed; however, by the end of the school year, eighth graders are expected to demonstrate proficiency of the grade-level indicators with independence. Examples of guidance and support might include but are not limited to, one-on-one instruction, small group instruction, reteaching, prompting, and differentiated instruction.
As part of their close examination of literary text structure, eighth-grade students begin to examine how an author manipulates time to create mystery and suspense. Eighth graders move from examining an author’s use of rhetorical appeals into analyzing how an author uses rhetoric in texts.
Eighth-grade students read a variety of fiction, literary nonfiction, poetry, and drama from across cultures and time periods. Text types should include short novels, chapter books, contemporary fiction, science fiction, and historical fiction. In addition to literary texts, instruction in eighth grade should include expository, persuasive, and informational texts that can include but are not limited to, historical documents, news articles, speeches, personal essays, memoirs, autobiographical and biographical sketches, speeches, advertisements, primary and secondary sources, reviews, and schedules. Students should also examine documentaries, commercials, podcasts, visual performances, infographics, and other forms of multimedia texts.
Throughout the year, eighth-grade students refine their written and oral communication skills to communicate to a variety of audiences. Students write shorter and longer narratives, arguments, and informational texts. In informational/expository writing, eighth graders examine multiple sources of information while using their research skills to select only those that are credible and relevant to the topic they are presenting. Eighth-grade students continue writing summary paragraphs, multi-paragraph essays, text-dependent writing, and creative pieces. As appropriate, students may also begin to explore and practice other types of college and career-ready writing such as professional emails, personal letters, public service announcements, and editorials. Lastly, students in eighth grade participate in academic discussions and communicate appropriately to a variety of audiences while considering new ideas and diverse perspectives of others. - SC Department of Education, 2024
SC StudySync Curriculum
To become college and career-ready students will engage in learning through a standards-driven curriculum that supports rigorous literacy instruction. The core English Language Arts curriculum centers on six instructional units at each grade level. Each unit shares an integrated approach that blends instruction across reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language skills for a more balanced approach to literacy instruction.
Lessons within StudySync are designed to build your students' ability to work both collaboratively and independently. Multimedia such as the StudySync® TV episodes model for your students how to participate in a critical discussion of literature, how to support their viewpoint with text evidence, and how to skillfully use academic vocabulary – all while collaborating with their peers. StudySync’s digital platform ensures equitable access for all students. Lessons can be customized for each learner’s needs. Students are supported each step of the way with a variety of scaffolds, with passages in supplemental languages, audio of each text with highlighting to follow along, and slide-in sentence frames to support written responses. Pre-assessments, formative assessments, and summative assessments are aligned to grade level standards and should be used to target instruction and monitor growth.