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Common Core ELA Grades 11–12 · United States

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Mark Twain

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About the Common Core 11–12 curriculum

The Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts Grades 11–12 (CCSS RL.11–12) are the United States' most widely-adopted state-by-state literature standards, taught in roughly forty states despite the heterogeneity of district-level implementation. The Reading: Literature strand expects students to cite strong textual evidence, analyse impact of structural choices, evaluate multiple interpretations of a source text, and analyse how an author draws on and transforms source material. The CCSS Appendix B publishes an Exemplar Texts list as a representative — not prescriptive — guide to text complexity at this grade band. The list pulls broadly: Twain's Huckleberry Finn, Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath and East of Eden, In Cold Blood, Black Boy, Frederick Douglass's Narrative, the Russian nineteenth-century novel (Crime and Punishment, Anna Karenina, War and Peace), the founding American non-fiction tradition (the Declaration, Federalist No. 10, Self-Reliance, Civil Disobedience, Walden, Letter from Birmingham Jail), and the long American short-story tradition (The Yellow Wallpaper, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge). Storgy's Common Core coverage targets the Exemplar Texts list and the works districts most commonly substitute in. Each work ships with text-complexity analysis, source-and-influence threading, multiple-interpretation analytic prompts, and writing tasks scaffolded against the CCSS Writing strand W.11–12.1 (argumentative) and W.11–12.2 (informational-explanatory).

More Common Core 11–12 works