TEA AP Biology PowerPoint Slides
Instructor PowerPoint slides for TEA AP Biology open-source instructional materials.
TEA AP Biology Textbook PDF
TEA AP Biology Textbook PDF
Understatement/Overstatement (English I Reading)

You will be able to recognize and explain the purpose of understatement and overstatement in a text.
Diction and Tone (English I Reading)

You will be able to evaluate the diction in a text and discover the author's tone.
Close Reading of Prose: Practice 1 (English I Reading)

You will read carefully in order to identify diction, tone, and irony and evaluate their impact on the meaning of a text.
Development of Characters Through Literary Devices (English I Reading)

You will be able to recognize how literary devices such as character foils can create complex characters in a short story.
Analyze Literary Essays’ Inclusion of Personal Opinions and Facts (English I Reading)

You will be able to explain why literary essays include personal opinions and facts to describe an event or situation.
Denotation and Connotation (English I Reading)

You will be able to distinguish between the denotative (dictionary) meaning of a word and its connotative (emotions or associations that are implied rather than literal) meaning.
Linguistic Roots and Affixes (English 8 Reading)

You will be able to recognize linguistic roots and affixes to use in determining the meanings of academic English words and in other content areas.
Cognates (English I Reading)

You will use your knowledge of cognates from other languages to help you understand unfamiliar words.
Synthesize Ideas and Details in Several Texts (English I Reading)

You will learn how to synthesize ideas and details in texts and support the connections with textual evidence.
Annotate for Meaning (English I Reading)

You will learn how to annotate or mark a text as you read and re-read to gain a deeper understanding of the text.
Annotate and Analyze a Paired Passage: Practice 1 (English I Reading)

You will read and annotate paired texts in order to make inferences, draw conclusions, and synthesize ideas and details using textual evidence.
Generate Ideas and Questions

You will learn strategies to help you generate questions and ideas about a topic.
Monologues and Soliloquies (English I Reading)

You will be able to recognize monologue and soliloquy and explain how they function in a play.
Parallelism of Details (English I Writing)

You will learn strategies for evaluating and revising an essay so that similar grammatical structures in sentences, phrases, and paragraphs are parallel.
Syntax (English I Reading)

You will be able to evaluate the author's syntax and its impact on the meaning of a text.
Use Outlines, Notetaking, Graphic Organizers, Lists (English I Writing)

You will learn how to use outlines, notes, graphic organizers, and lists to help you evaluate and organize your ideas.
Make Connections Between and Across Literary Texts (English 7 Reading)

You will learn how to make connections between and across texts, including other media (e.g., film, play), and provide textual evidence.
Distinguish Between Summary and Critique (English I Reading)

You will learn how to summarize a text in contrast to writing a critique that takes a position.