American Education in the United Arab Emirates Issue 1 2015 | Page 19

list. Instead, teachers and school leadership are empowered to define what to teach and how to teach their students within categories of critical content, which include classic myths and stories from around the world, foundational US documents, seminal works of American literature, and Shakespeare. 2. Reading, Writing, and Speaking Grounded in Evidence from Texts, both Literary and Informational. The new standards focus on evidence-based writing and the ability to inform and persuade across reading, writing, and speaking. Students must analyze evidence from texts to present clear arguments and well-defended claims. Students are expected to answer a range of text-dependent questions, rather than rely on prior knowledge, opinion, and life experience. 3. Building Knowledge Through Content-rich Nonfiction Students need to become successful readers and systematically develop knowledge about the world around them. Learning independently through reading nonfiction is a key tenet of the new ELA standards. There is also a focus on literature throughout K-12. It is the core focus of grades 6-12 and it constitutes half of the reading in K-5, whereas the other half is on informational reading, which is content-rich nonfiction in history/social studies, sciences, technical studies, and the arts. In grades 6-12, the standards for literacy in history/s