Ohio Β· ODEWSyllabus
English Language syllabus, dot point by dot point
Every dot point in the Ohio English Languagesyllabus, with a focused answer for each one. Click any dot point for a worked explainer, past exam questions, and links to related dot points. Written by Claude Opus 4.8, Anthropic's latest AI.
Exam Strategy
Module overview β- How do you budget your time across the two parts so the reading items and the extended response both get the time they need?Pacing the Ohio English II test: budgeting time across the two parts so the machine-scored reading items and the hand-scored extended response both get enough time, reserving sustained time for planning and writing the essay, using a flag-and-return strategy for hard items, and reading passages efficiently without rushing comprehension.10 min answer β
- What are the five performance levels, what is the competency score that counts toward graduation, and what happens if you do not reach it?Performance levels and graduation on the Ohio English II test: the five performance levels (Limited, Basic, Proficient, Accelerated, Advanced), the competency score of 684 that counts toward graduation for the classes of 2023 and beyond, how it relates to the Proficient level, and the support, retake, and approved alternatives for students who do not reach it.11 min answer β
- How do you use the writing prompt and the rubric together as a strategy, reading the prompt for the task and writing toward the three rubric domains on purpose?Reading the prompt and the rubric on the Ohio English II test: using the extended-response prompt and Ohio's grades 6-12 writing rubric together as a strategy, reading the prompt to fix the mode and task and writing deliberately toward the three rubric domains, Purpose Focus and Organization, Evidence and Elaboration, and Conventions, so the essay earns marks in each.10 min answer β
- What are the technology-enhanced item types on the test, drag-and-drop, drop-down, hot-text, multi-select, and evidence-based two-part items, and how do you answer each?Technology-enhanced item types on the Ohio English II test: multiple-choice, multi-select, and the technology-enhanced formats, drag-and-drop, drop-down menus, hot-text selection, and evidence-based selected-response two-part items where a second part asks for the supporting line, and how to read and answer each format accurately.10 min answer β
- How is the English II test organized into two parts, what is in each part, and how does knowing the structure help you plan your work?The two-part structure of the Ohio English II test: how the test is delivered in two parts on computer, what each part contains (reading passages with machine-scored items and at least one hand-scored extended response), how the reporting categories of Reading Literary Text, Reading Informational Text, and Writing map onto it, and how knowing the structure helps you plan.10 min answer β
Language and Vocabulary
Module overview β- How do you tell the difference between a word's literal meaning and its connotation, and how do you read figurative meaning such as idiom and figures of speech in a passage?Analyzing denotation, connotation, and figurative meaning on the Ohio English II test: distinguishing a word's denotation (literal dictionary meaning) from its connotation (the feeling or association it carries), reading figurative meaning including idiom and figures of speech, and explaining how an author's word choice shapes tone and meaning.9 min answer β
- How do you apply the conventions of standard English grammar and usage, the rules tested in editing items and scored on the extended response?Applying grammar and usage conventions on the Ohio English II test: subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement and clear pronoun reference, consistent verb tense, parallel structure, and standard usage of commonly confused words, applied in editing items and scored under Conventions of Standard English on the extended-response writing task.10 min answer β
- How do you punctuate sentences correctly, and how do you fix comma splices, run-ons, and fragments in editing items?Applying punctuation and sentence structure conventions on the Ohio English II test: using commas, semicolons, colons, and apostrophes correctly, joining and separating independent clauses, and recognizing and fixing comma splices, run-on sentences, and sentence fragments, tested in editing items and scored under Conventions of Standard English on the extended response.10 min answer β
- How do you work out the meaning of an unfamiliar word from the passage around it, using context clues rather than a dictionary?Determining vocabulary in context on the Ohio English II test: using context clues (definition, example, contrast, and general sense) to work out the meaning of an unfamiliar or multiple-meaning word as it is used in a passage, and choosing the meaning that fits the sentence rather than the word's most common or dictionary-first meaning.9 min answer β
- How do you use roots, prefixes, and suffixes to work out the meaning of an unfamiliar word, and how does a suffix change a word's part of speech?Using word parts on the Ohio English II test: breaking an unfamiliar word into root, prefix, and suffix to infer its meaning, recognizing common Greek and Latin roots and affixes, and understanding how a suffix can change a word's part of speech, used together with context to confirm the meaning.9 min answer β
Reading Informational Texts
Module overview β- How do you trace an argument, telling the central claim apart from reasons and evidence, and how do you judge whether the reasoning is sound?Analyzing argument and claims in informational texts on the Ohio English II test: identifying the central claim, the reasons that support it, and the evidence behind the reasons, distinguishing a claim from a fact and from an opinion, recognizing a counterclaim, and evaluating whether the reasoning is valid and the evidence relevant and sufficient.10 min answer β
- How do you identify an author's purpose and point of view, and how do you analyze the rhetorical choices, including word choice and appeals, that advance it?Analyzing author's purpose and rhetoric in informational texts on the Ohio English II test: determining the author's purpose and point of view, distinguishing purpose (to inform, persuade, or explain) from topic, and analyzing rhetorical choices such as word choice, tone, and the appeals to logic, emotion, and credibility (logos, pathos, ethos) and their effect.10 min answer β
- How do you state the central idea of an informational text as a full sentence, and how do you tell it apart from a supporting detail or a single fact?Analyzing central ideas in informational texts on the Ohio English II test: stating the controlling idea of an article or essay as a full sentence, distinguishing the central idea from supporting details and from the topic, tracing how the central idea is developed across paragraphs, and writing an objective summary that captures it.9 min answer β
- How do you read two informational texts on the same topic together, comparing how they treat it and synthesizing them into one understanding?Comparing and synthesizing paired informational texts on the Ohio English II test: reading two texts on a shared topic, analyzing how their central ideas, claims, evidence, or emphasis agree and differ, synthesizing them into a combined understanding, and supporting each point with evidence from the correct source, which is also the reading skill the extended-response writing task depends on.9 min answer β
- How do you make an inference from a text and then find the line that proves it, especially on the evidence-based two-part items?Making inferences and citing text evidence on the Ohio English II test: drawing a logical inference from what a text states and implies, distinguishing an inference from a guess and from a restatement, citing the strongest evidence that supports an analysis, and handling evidence-based two-part items where Part A is the inference and Part B is the supporting line.10 min answer β
- How do you recognize the structure of an informational text, and how does the way it is organized help it make its point?Analyzing text structure and organization in informational texts on the Ohio English II test: recognizing common structures (cause and effect, compare and contrast, problem and solution, chronological or sequential, claim and support) and explaining how an author's structural choice, including the order of paragraphs and the placement of a key idea, advances the central idea or argument.9 min answer β
Reading Literature
Module overview β- How do you state a theme as a full idea about life rather than a one-word topic, and how do you find the evidence in the passage that proves it?Analyzing theme and central idea in literary texts: stating a theme as a complete sentence about life or human nature rather than a topic word, distinguishing theme from subject and from moral, and tracing how a writer develops a theme through plot, character, and detail across an unseen Ohio English II literary passage.10 min answer β
- How do you infer a character's traits and motivation from the text, and how does the narrator's point of view shape what the reader is allowed to know?Analyzing character and point of view in literary texts: inferring traits and motivation from a character's words, actions, and thoughts (indirect characterization), tracking how a character changes, and explaining how the narrator's point of view (first person, third limited, third omniscient) controls what the reader knows on an Ohio English II literary passage.10 min answer β
- How do you compare two literary texts, for example two poems or a story and a poem, on a point such as theme, tone, or how a subject is treated?Comparing two literary texts on the Ohio English II test: reading paired literary passages (two poems, two stories, or a story and a poem) and analyzing how they are alike and different on a specific point such as theme, tone, character, or the treatment of a shared subject, and supporting each side of the comparison with evidence from the right text.9 min answer β
- How do you identify figurative language and literary devices, and how do you explain their effect rather than just naming them?Analyzing figurative language and literary devices in literary texts: identifying simile, metaphor, personification, imagery, symbolism, hyperbole, and tone, and explaining the effect each creates (the feeling, picture, or meaning it builds) on an Ohio English II literary passage, rather than only labelling the device.10 min answer β
- What are the stages of plot and the kinds of conflict, and why does it matter how a writer ordered the events of a story?Analyzing plot, conflict, and structure in literary texts: the stages of plot (exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution), internal and external conflict, and how a writer's structural choices (order of events, flashback, foreshadowing, pacing) shape meaning on an Ohio English II literary passage.10 min answer β
- How do you read a poem on the test for meaning first, then answer questions about its structure, sound, and figurative language?Reading poetry on the Ohio English II test: paraphrasing a poem for meaning (speaker, situation, feeling) before analyzing form, reading structure (stanzas, line breaks, refrain) and sound (rhyme, rhythm, repetition) as carriers of meaning, and explaining how a poem's figurative language builds its central idea on an unseen poem.9 min answer β
Revising and Editing
Module overview β- How do editing items ask you to fix grammar, usage, capitalization, punctuation, and spelling in a draft, and how do you find the one convention an item turns on?Editing for grammar and usage on the Ohio English II test: correcting errors in a draft, subject-verb agreement, pronoun agreement and reference, verb tense, parallel structure, capitalization, punctuation, and spelling, choosing the correction that fixes the tested convention without introducing a new error, the same conventions scored on the extended response.10 min answer β
- What forms do revising and editing items take on the test, drop-down menus, hot-text selection, multiple choice, and how do you work each one efficiently?Revising and editing item types on the Ohio English II test: how revising and editing skills are tested through drop-down menus, hot-text selection, drag-and-drop, and multiple-choice items, including items that ask you to choose a correction, select the error, place a sentence, or pick the best replacement, and how to read and answer each form.10 min answer β
- How do revising items ask you to improve a draft's clarity, development, and organization, and how is that different from editing for grammar?Revising for clarity and organization on the Ohio English II test: improving a draft's meaning, development, and structure, choosing the best place for a sentence, adding a transition or a supporting detail, deleting an irrelevant sentence, and combining or reordering ideas, as distinct from editing, which fixes grammar and mechanics.10 min answer β
- How do you fix run-ons, comma splices, and fragments, and how do you combine short sentences into one clear, correct sentence?Sentence boundaries and combining on the Ohio English II test: recognizing and correcting run-on sentences, comma splices, and fragments, and combining choppy short sentences into a single clear sentence using coordination, subordination, or punctuation, so each sentence is complete and the relationship between ideas is clear.10 min answer β
- How do revising items ask you to improve word choice, replacing a vague or wordy phrase with a precise word and matching tone to the writing?Word choice and precision on the Ohio English II test: improving a draft by replacing a vague or imprecise word with an exact one, cutting wordiness and redundancy, choosing words whose connotation fits the meaning, and keeping a consistent tone, so the writing is clear, concise, and appropriate to its purpose and audience.10 min answer β
The Extended Response
Module overview β- How do you read an extended-response prompt to find the writing mode and the exact task, so you write what is asked rather than what you assume?Analyzing the prompt and the writing mode on the Ohio English II extended response: reading the prompt to decide whether it calls for argumentation or informative or explanatory writing, identifying the exact task and any required scope (one text or paired texts), and planning a response that answers the prompt directly before writing.10 min answer β
- How do you build and order the body of the essay, an introduction, developed paragraphs with transitions, and a conclusion, so the logic is easy for a reader to follow?Developing and organizing the extended response on the Ohio English II test: building an introduction that frames the claim or controlling idea, body paragraphs that each make a point with evidence and explanation, logical sequencing with transitions, and a conclusion that follows from the response, so the essay is coherent and easy to follow. This drives the Purpose, Focus, and Organization domain.11 min answer β
- What are the three domains of Ohio's grades 6-12 writing rubric, how many points does each carry, and how do you write toward them?Ohio's writing rubric and scoring for the English II extended response: the three domains of the grades 6-12 writing rubric, Purpose, Focus, and Organization (0 to 4), Evidence and Elaboration (0 to 4), and Conventions of Standard English (0 to 2), the two rubric versions for argumentation and informative or explanatory writing, how trained readers apply them, and what earns a 0.11 min answer β
- What is the extended response on the Ohio English II test, what does it ask you to do, and how is it scored differently from the reading items?Understanding the extended response on the Ohio English II test: a source-based essay in which you read one or more passages and write a full response that draws its evidence from those texts, written in argumentation or informative or explanatory mode and hand-scored by trained readers on Ohio's grades 6-12 writing rubric rather than machine-scored.10 min answer β
- How do you select, quote or paraphrase, and explain evidence from the passages so it actually supports your claim and earns the Evidence and Elaboration marks?Using text evidence in the extended response on the Ohio English II test: selecting relevant evidence from the source passages, quoting or paraphrasing it accurately, and explaining how each piece supports the claim or develops the controlling idea, rather than dropping quotations without analysis. This is the core of the Evidence and Elaboration domain.10 min answer β
- How do you write the one sentence that anchors the whole essay, a defensible claim for argumentation or a clear controlling idea for informative writing?Writing a claim or controlling idea on the Ohio English II extended response: stating a precise, defensible claim that answers an argumentation prompt and can be supported from the texts, or a clear controlling idea that frames an informative or explanatory response, and placing it where a reader can find it. This anchors the Purpose, Focus, and Organization domain.10 min answer β