Michigan Department of Education · English Language Arts · K–12

Michigan K–12 ELA Standards & Skills Strand-by-strand, grade-by-grade reference for the Michigan ELA Standards (RL, RI, RF, W, SL, L), with curated free resources for every skill, Troy SD curriculum overlay, and a secondary view of NWEA MAP Growth alignment.

NWEA ELA · test families at a glance

Unlike Math, NWEA's ELA coverage is spread across multiple products. A complete K–5 ELA picture often requires both MAP Growth Reading and MAP Reading Fluency. Beginning around Grade 2, Language Usage adds the conventions/editing piece.

Test Grade Range Instructional Areas Strands Covered
MAP Growth K-2 Reading K – Gr 2
  • Foundational Skills
  • Vocabulary Use & Functions
  • Literature
  • Informational Text
RL RI RF L (partial)
MAP Growth Reading 2-5 Gr 2 – Gr 5
  • Vocabulary Acquisition & Use
  • Literature
  • Informational Text
RL RI L (vocab only)
MAP Growth Reading 6+ Gr 6 – Gr 12
  • Vocabulary Acquisition & Use
  • Literary Text
  • Informational Text
RL RI L (vocab only)
MAP Reading Fluency K – Gr 3 (typical); extends higher
  • Foundational Skills
  • Oral Reading Fluency
  • Listening / Reading Comprehension
  • Dyslexia Screener (optional)
RF (the only measure of RF.4)
MAP Growth Language Usage ~Gr 2 – Gr 12
  • Edit for Meaning
  • Edit for Language Use
  • Apply Conventions of Writing
W (editing only) L (conventions)
RL Reading: Literature RI Reading: Informational RF Reading Foundational (K–5) W Writing SL Speaking & Listening L Language Gap not assessed by NWEA

The matrix · jump to a grade

Searches across all grades and strands.

Kindergarten

Strand Key Standards Skills NWEA Test NWEA Area RIT Notes
RL

RL.K.1–3
RL.K.4, RL.K.7

  • Ask/answer about key details
  • Retell familiar stories
  • Identify characters, setting, events
MAP Growth K-2 Reading Literature <161 – 180 Audio read-aloud items.
RI

RI.K.1–3
RI.K.6

  • Main topic & key details
  • Connections between ideas
  • Author/illustrator roles
MAP Growth K-2 Reading Informational Text <161 – 180 Clean.
RF

RF.K.1
RF.K.2
RF.K.3
RF.K.4

  • Print concepts
  • Phonological awareness (rhyme, syllable, phoneme)
  • Letter-sound
  • Emergent reading
K-2 Reading + Reading Fluency Foundational Skills + ORF <161 – 190 RF.4 (oral) ONLY via Reading Fluency.
W

W.K.1–3

  • Opinion / informative / narrative pieces via drawing + dictating + writing
Gap Composition not assessed at K.
SL

SL.K.1
SL.K.2
SL.K.4

  • Participate in conversations
  • Ask/answer about read-alouds
  • Describe people/things
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.K.1–2
L.K.4–5

  • Print conventions, capitalization
  • Word meanings, categories, relationships
MAP Growth K-2 Reading Vocabulary Use & Functions <161 – 180 Vocab covered; conventions touched lightly.

Grade 1

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.1.1–3
RL.1.4, .7, .9

  • Key details
  • Central message
  • Characters; sensory words
  • Compare stories
K-2 Reading Literature 161–190 Clean.
RI

RI.1.1–3
RI.1.5–6, .9

  • Main topic; text features
  • Reasons author gives
  • Compare two texts
K-2 Reading Informational Text 161–190 Clean.
RF

RF.1.1–4

  • Print concepts
  • Segment/blend phonemes
  • Long vowels, digraphs, inflectional endings
  • Fluency with comprehension
K-2 Reading + Reading Fluency Foundational Skills + ORF + Decoding 161–200 Reading Fluency essential for oral piece.
W

W.1.1–3, .5, .7

  • Opinion / info / narrative
  • Respond with details
  • Participate in research
Gap Composition not assessed.
SL

SL.1.1–6

  • Discussion rules
  • Ask/answer; describe
  • Produce complete sentences
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.1.1–2, .4–6

  • Sentence types; nouns; punctuation
  • Context clues, affixes
  • Word relationships
K-2 Reading Vocabulary Use & Functions 161–190 Vocab covered.

Grade 2

Transition grade. Either K-2 or 2-5 form may be used; Language Usage typically begins here.

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.2.1–3, .5–7, .9

  • Recount; central message/lesson
  • Story structure
  • POV (different voices)
  • Compare versions
K-2 or 2-5 Literature 171–200 Form depends on district.
RI

RI.2.1–3, .5–6, .8–9

  • Main topic of multi-paragraph text
  • Text features; author's purpose
  • Reasons supporting points; compare two texts
K-2 or 2-5 Informational Text 171–200 Clean.
RF

RF.2.3
RF.2.4

  • Long/short vowels, vowel teams, prefixes/suffixes, irregular words
  • Fluency — accuracy, rate, expression
K-2 Reading + Reading Fluency Foundational Skills / ORF 171–200 RF.4 only via Reading Fluency.
W

W.2.1–3, .5–8

  • Opinion w/ reasons
  • Informative w/ facts
  • Narrative w/ sequence
  • Revise; research
Language Usage (starts ~Gr 2) Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 171–200 Editing only — not composition.
SL

SL.2.1–6

  • Discussion; ask/answer
  • Recount; describe with detail
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.2.1–6

  • Collective nouns, irregular plurals
  • Capitalization, apostrophes
  • Root words & affixes
  • Shades of meaning
2-5 Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 171–200 Split: vocab on Reading; conventions on Language Usage.

Grade 3

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.3.1–9

  • Ask/answer using text
  • Central message + how conveyed
  • Characters' traits/motivations
  • Literal/nonliteral; story structure; POV
2-5 Reading Literature 181–210 Key Ideas / Craft & Structure all represented.
RI

RI.3.1–9

  • Main idea + supporting details
  • Cause/effect, sequence
  • Domain vocabulary; text features
  • Compare two texts on same topic
2-5 Reading Informational Text 181–210 Clean.
RF

RF.3.3
RF.3.4

  • Multisyllabic words; Latin suffixes
  • Fluency for comprehension
Reading Fluency ORF + Decoding + Comprehension 181–210 Some districts stop Reading Fluency after Gr 3.
W

W.3.1–10

  • Opinion w/ linking words
  • Informative w/ grouping
  • Narrative w/ dialogue
  • Short research
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 181–210 Editing only.
SL

SL.3.1–6

  • Collaborative discussion
  • Paraphrase; report on topic
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.3.1–6

  • Pronouns, verb tenses, S–V agreement
  • Commas, quotation marks
  • Literal/nonliteral
  • Word relationships; academic language
2-5 Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 181–210 Split.

Grade 4

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.4.1–9

  • Refer to details/examples
  • Theme + summarize
  • Mythological allusions
  • Structural elements (poems/drama/prose)
  • 1st/3rd-person POV
2-5 Reading Literature 191–220 Clean.
RI

RI.4.1–9

  • Main idea + summarize
  • Explain events/procedures/concepts
  • Academic/domain vocab
  • Text structures; first/secondhand accounts
2-5 Reading Informational Text 191–220 Clean.
RF

RF.4.3
RF.4.4

  • Letter-sound, syllabication, morphology
  • Fluency — accuracy, rate, expression
Reading Fluency (if used) ORF + Decoding 191–220 Many districts stop after Gr 3.
W

W.4.1–10

  • Opinion w/ structure
  • Informative w/ formatting/illustrations
  • Narrative w/ dialogue/description
  • Group related info
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 191–220 Editing only.
SL

SL.4.1–6

  • Effective discussion; paraphrase
  • Identify reasons/evidence speaker uses
  • Differentiate formal/informal
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.4.1–6

  • Progressive verb tenses; modal auxiliaries
  • Capitalization, punctuation, spelling
  • Greek/Latin affixes & roots
  • Figurative language
2-5 Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 191–220 Split.

Grade 5

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.5.1–9

  • Quote accurately; theme + summarize
  • Compare characters/settings/events
  • Figurative language; structure (chapters/scenes/stanzas)
  • Multiple POVs; multimedia analysis
2-5 Reading Literature 201–225 Clean.
RI

RI.5.1–9

  • Two+ main ideas + summarize
  • Relationships; academic vocabulary
  • Overall text structure
  • Multiple POVs/accounts; integrate info
2-5 Reading Informational Text 201–225 Clean.
RF

RF.5.3
RF.5.4

  • Phonics & word recognition (advanced)
  • Fluency for comprehension
Reading Fluency (if used) ORF + Comprehension 201+ Last grade with RF strand.
W

W.5.1–10

  • Opinion w/ logical reasons
  • Informative w/ formatting
  • Narrative w/ pacing
  • Research
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 201–220 Editing only.
SL

SL.5.1–6

  • Discussion; summarize info from media
  • Identify reasons/evidence
  • Adapt speech
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.5.1–6

  • Verb tense (perfect); conjunctions
  • Commas in series/intro
  • Figurative language (idioms, adages, proverbs)
  • Academic/domain words
2-5 Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 201–220 Split.

Grade 6

Transition to MAP Growth Reading 6+. RF strand ends — students are expected to be reading independently.

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.6.1–9

  • Cite textual evidence; theme via particulars
  • How plot unfolds + characters respond
  • Figurative/connotative meanings; word choice impact
  • POV; compare reading vs. listening/viewing
6+ Reading Literary Text 201–225 Form transition.
RI

RI.6.1–9

  • Cite evidence; central idea + how conveyed
  • Analyze how key person/event/idea is introduced
  • Figurative/connotative/technical meanings
  • Trace and evaluate argument
6+ Reading Informational Text 201–225 Clean.
W

W.6.1–10

  • Argument w/ claims & evidence
  • Informative
  • Narrative w/ technique
  • Research; cite sources
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 211–230 Editing only.
SL

SL.6.1–6

  • Discussion; interpret info
  • Delineate speaker's argument
  • Adapt speech
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.6.1–6

  • Pronoun case, intensive/vague pronouns
  • Commas/parentheses/dashes
  • Figurative language; word relationships; connotation
6+ Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 211–230 Split.

Grade 7

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.7.1–9

  • Multiple pieces of evidence
  • Theme + analyze development
  • How elements interact
  • Form/structure; contrasting POVs
6+ Reading Literary Text 211–230 Clean.
RI

RI.7.1–9

  • Multiple evidence pieces
  • Two+ central ideas + development
  • Analyze interactions
  • Trace and evaluate argument; compare two authors on same topic
6+ Reading Informational Text 211–230 Clean.
W

W.7.1–10

  • Argument w/ logical reasoning
  • Informative; narrative
  • Research; cite sources, avoid plagiarism
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 211–230 Editing only.
SL

SL.7.1–6

  • Discussion; analyze main ideas
  • Evaluate soundness of reasoning
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.7.1–6

  • Phrases & clauses; dangling modifiers
  • Coordinate adjective commas
  • Connotations among similar words
6+ Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 211–230 Split.

Grade 8

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.8.1–9

  • Strongest evidence; theme + relationship to characters/setting/plot
  • Dialogue/incidents propel action
  • Figurative meanings; analogies/allusions
  • POV/dramatic irony; modern works draw on traditional themes
6+ Reading Literary Text 211–240 Clean.
RI

RI.8.1–9

  • Strongest evidence; central idea + objective summary
  • Connections/distinctions
  • Analogies/allusions; structure of paragraphs
  • Evaluate relevance/sufficiency of evidence
6+ Reading Informational Text 211–240 Clean.
W

W.8.1–10

  • Argument acknowledging counter-claims
  • Informative; narrative w/ reflection
  • Research
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 221–240 Editing only.
SL

SL.8.1–6

  • Discussion; analyze media purposes
  • Identify when irrelevant evidence is introduced
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.8.1–6

  • Verbals (gerund/participle/infinitive)
  • Active/passive voice; verb mood
  • Ellipsis & pause punctuation
  • Analogies; figures of speech
6+ Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 221–240 Split.

Grade 9–10

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.9-10.1–9

  • Strong evidence + inferences
  • Theme + how it emerges/is shaped/refined
  • How complex characters develop
  • Cumulative impact of figurative language; structural choices
6+ Reading Literary Text 221–250 Clean for grade-level rigor.
RI

RI.9-10.1–9

  • Strong evidence; central idea + how shaped/refined
  • Author's claims developed
  • POV + use of rhetoric
  • Identify false statements/fallacious reasoning
6+ Reading Informational Text 221–250 Clean.
W

W.9-10.1–10

  • Argument distinguishing claim from alternate/opposing
  • Informative w/ sophisticated organization
  • Narrative w/ complex characters
  • Sustained research
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 221–250 Editing only — does NOT measure sustained argument or research.
SL

SL.9-10.1–6

  • Discussion w/ propelling questions
  • Integrate multiple sources
  • Evaluate POV/reasoning/evidence/rhetoric
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.9-10.1–6

  • Parallel structure; phrases & clauses
  • Semicolons, colons
  • Patterns of word changes (etymology)
  • Figurative language nuances
6+ Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 221–250 Split.

Grade 11–12

Watch the ceiling — students reading well above grade level may hit the test ceiling on MAP Growth 6+ Reading.

StrandKey StandardsSkillsNWEA TestNWEA AreaRITNotes
RL

RL.11-12.1–9

  • Strong evidence + matters left uncertain
  • Two+ themes + interaction & development
  • Author's choices about elements
  • POV including satire/sarcasm/irony
  • Foundational works of American literature
6+ Reading Literary Text 230s–240s+ Ceiling considerations apply.
RI

RI.11-12.1–9

  • Strong evidence + uncertainty
  • Two+ central ideas in complex interaction
  • Effectiveness of structure
  • Reasoning in seminal U.S. texts
  • 17th–19th century foundational documents
6+ Reading Informational Text 230s–240s+ Same ceiling caveat.
W

W.11-12.1–10

  • Argument using valid reasoning + sufficient evidence
  • Informative anticipating audience knowledge
  • Narratives building toward outcome
  • Sustained research
Language Usage Edit for Meaning · Language Use · Conventions 230s–240s+ Editing only — limited at this grade for college-prep writing.
SL

SL.11-12.1–6

  • Discussion w/ informed positions
  • Integrate multiple sources
  • Evaluate stance/premises/links/word choice
Gap No MAP equivalent.
L

L.11-12.1–6

  • Usage as conventions change over time
  • Hyphenation conventions
  • Hyperbole/paradox
  • Connotative/denotative shades
6+ Reading + Language Usage Vocabulary Acq. & Use · Conventions 230s–240s+ Split.

Documented gaps · what NWEA does NOT measure

Three strands or skill clusters fall outside MAP's coverage. Districts using MAP as a sole literacy measure should know what they're missing.

Speaking & Listening (SL · K–12)

The entire SL strand has no MAP equivalent. Conversation skills, oral presentations, evaluating a speaker's argument, integrating media — none of it is on MAP. Use observation rubrics, classroom protocols, or performance tasks.

Writing composition (W · K–12)

Language Usage measures editing of supplied text. Student-produced argument, informative, narrative, and research writing (W.1–10) is not scored. Districts that want a writing measure must pair MAP with a composition rubric, on-demand prompt, or performance task.

Oral Reading Fluency (RF.4 · K–5)

MAP Growth K-2 Reading covers Foundational Skills items but cannot measure oral reading rate, accuracy, and prosody. RF.4 is only assessed via the separate MAP Reading Fluency product or another ORF screener (DIBELS, Acadience, etc.).

Throughlines · single concepts that thread K → 12

Six concepts that evolve continuously across grade bands and consistently land in a particular NWEA instructional area at each stage.

1. Vocabulary Acquisition

K–1: L.K-1.4 — new word meanings; categories; affixes
2–5: L.2-5.4-6 — context, Greek/Latin affixes, figurative language, academic words
6–8: L.6-8.4-6 — technical/connotative meanings, denotation/connotation
9–12: L.9-12.4-6 — etymology, nuance, hyperbole/paradox
NWEA: Vocabulary instructional area on every Reading test
Single most cleanly-aligned throughline. Track this sub-score from K to 12.

2. Central Idea / Theme

K–2: RL/RI.K-2.2 — central message; main topic; retell
3–5: RL/RI.3-5.2 — theme/main idea + summarize
6–8: RL/RI.6-8.2 — how theme/central idea is developed
9–12: RL/RI.9-12.2 — multiple themes shaped/refined; complex interaction
NWEA: Literature/Informational Text — Key Ideas & Details
Identification → support with details → analyze development → analyze interaction.

3. Argument / Evidence Evaluation

K–2: RI.K-2.8 — reasons author gives
3–5: RI.3-5.8 — identify which evidence supports which point
6–8: RI.6-8.8 — assess relevance/sufficiency of evidence
9–12: RI.9-12.8 — identify false statements/fallacies; reasoning in seminal texts
NWEA: Informational Text — Integration of Knowledge & Ideas
Notice reasons → identify evidence → evaluate sufficiency → identify fallacies.

4. Foundational Skills → Fluency Bridge

K–1: RF.K-1 — print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics
2–3: RF.2-3 — advanced phonics, fluency for comprehension
4–5: RF.4-5 — morphology; fluency supports meaning
6+: RF strand ends
NWEA: K-2 Reading covers FS; ORF requires Reading Fluency
Foundational decoding fades by Gr 5; oral-fluency assessment requires the separate product.

5. Conventions / Editing

K–1: L.K-1.1-2 — print conventions, capitalization, end punctuation
2–5: L.2-5.1-2 — parts of speech, agreement, mechanics, spelling
6–8: L.6-8.1-2 — pronoun case, phrases/clauses, voice, mood
9–12: L.9-12.1-2 — parallel structure, semicolons, hyphenation
NWEA: Language Usage — Apply Conventions of Writing
Cleanest direct alignment after vocabulary. Editing of supplied text only.

6. Text Structure / Author's Craft

K–2: RL/RI.K-2.5-6 — text features, parts of stories, author/illustrator
3–5: RL/RI.3-5.5-6 — chapters/scenes/stanzas; overall structure; POV
6–8: RL/RI.6-8.5-6 — how part fits whole; develop POV
9–12: RL/RI.9-12.5-6 — structural choices; rhetoric, satire, irony
NWEA: Literature/Informational Text — Craft & Structure
Identify features → recognize structures → analyze how parts fit whole → evaluate rhetorical choices.