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Organizational Methods ( Patterns) and Transitions . Authors use many different methods to organize information. If you know which organizational method the author is using, you will better understand the information you read.Authors use two techniques to clearly show how ideas are related
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1. How to Become an Effective Reader Methods of Text Organization
And Transitions
2. Organizational Methods ( Patterns) and Transitions Authors use many different methods to organize information. If you know which organizational method the author is using, you will better understand the information you read.
Authors use two techniques to clearly show how ideas are related to one another:
Organizational Methods (Patterns)
Transitions
3. Organizational Methods (Patterns) Organizational Methods are established by using transitions to show the logical relationship between ideas in a paragraph or passage.
4. Transitions Transitions are words and phrases that show the logical relationships within a sentence and between sentences.
Example: Fernando is actively involved in several community organizations. Children know Fernando likes them because he goes on all the Boy Scout camping trips and he coaches a youth soccer league.
5. Organizational Methods (Patterns) Cause and Effect
Comparison and/or Contrast
Spatial Order-Location / Description
Time Order (Sequence, Chronological Order)/ Process
Enumeration (Listing)
Problem-Solution
Definition
Example
Addition
6. Cause and Effect In a passage that is organized according to cause and effect, the author tells what happened (effect) and why it happened (cause). Several causes might be given for one or the passage might describe several effects of one cause.
7. Example of Cause and Effect
8. Comparison and Contrast A passage of comparison and contrast focuses on how two or more things are alike and different. Sometimes an author compares a familiar item with something that is less well-known.
9. Words and Phrases Used in Comparison and Contrast Words that signal a comparison
As
Also
Like
Alike
Likewise
Resembles
Similar
Just as
Just like
Equally
Same both Words that signal a contrast
however
Although
Whereas
In contrast
Yet
Differs from
Instead
Unlike
On the contrary
Different from
On the other hand
10. Example of Compare and Contrast
11. The Time Order Pattern The time order pattern is perhaps the most common way to organize information. This type of organization generally shows a chain of events chronologically or in the order in which they occur.
There are two types:
Narration
Process
12. Transitions Used in the Time Order Pattern for Narration After
Afterward
As
At last
Before
Currently
During
Eventually
Finally
First
Last
Later
While
Meanwhile
Next
Now
Presently
Often
Previously
Second
Since
Soon
Then
Ultimately
Until
When
13. Example of Time Order (narration) When Corbin decided to become a teacher, he had no idea that he was also deciding to become a career student. His first notions of wanting only a bachelor’s degree were quickly dispelled. During those early years as a teacher, he found that the more he learned the more excited he was about teaching. Eventually, his passion for learning earned him a master’s degree and a doctorate degree.
14. Example of Time Order
15. Organizational Methods In addition to the methods described before, authors frequently organize their writing in the following ways:
Flashback
Bulleted List
Foreshadowing
Question/Answer
Argument/Support
16. Example: Relationships Within a Sentence Weightlifting builds and tones muscles; it also builds bone density.
17. Example: Relationships Between Sentences Robert and Dorothy had a fantastic time when they vacationed at Valhalla Resort on Marathon Key in Florida. They woke up before dawn every day so that they would not miss the beautiful sunrises….
18. Example To ensure proper interdental cleaning, floss each day. First, break off about 18 inches of floss and wind most of it around one of your middle fingers. Second, wind the remaining floss around the same finger of the opposite hand. Third, hold the floss tightly between your thumbs and forefingers. Next, guide the floss between your teeth using a gentle rubbing motion; never snap the floss into the gums. Then gently slide it into the space between the gum and tooth.
19. Spatial Order Pattern The space order pattern allows authors to describe a person, place, or thing based on its location or the way it is arranged in space.
The writer often uses descriptive details to help readers create vivid mental pictures.
For example, he might describe a tall building from bottom to top, a painting from left to right, a landscape.
20. Transition Words in the Spatial Order Pattern Above
Across
Adjacent to
At the bottom
At the side
At the top
At the side
Below
Beneath
Beside
Beyond
By
Center
Close to
Down
Far away
Farther
Here
In front of
In the back of
Inside
Left
Middle
Next to
Nearby
Outside
Right
There
To the left
To the right
Under
Underneath
Within
21. Example From their heads to the tips of their tails, humpback whales bear distinctive markings. On top a humpback whale is dotted with fleshy knobs called tubercles; a strand of hair with many nerve endings grows out of each tubercle.
22. The Listing Pattern Authors list a series or set of reasons, details, or points.
Changing the order of the details does not change their meaning.
23. Addition Transitions Used in the Listing Pattern And
Also
Furthermore
Another
Besides
Finally
First
First of all For one thing
In addition
Last
Last of all
Moreover
Next
One
Second
Third
24. Example An animal as large and beautiful as a horse needs to be cared for carefully. First, cleaning its stall on a regular basis is absolutely necessary. In addition, a horse needs to be groomed 3-5 times a week. Finally, a horse needs to be fed and exercised on a daily basis.
25. The Classification Pattern Authors use the classification pattern to sort ideas into smaller groups and describe the traits of each group.
Each smaller group, called a subgroup, is based on shared traits or characteristics.
26. Transitions Used in the Classification Pattern Another (group, kind, type)
Characteristics
First (group, categories, kind, type)
Second (group, categories, kind, type)
Order
Traits
27. Example “Wetlands” is a general term that includes several types of vital links between water and land. One type of wetland is a bog; it is characterized by spongy peat deposits, acidic waters, and is covered by a carpet of sphagnum moss. Another type of wetland is the marsh, which is a wetland frequently swamped with water; it is characterized by soft-stemmed vegetation. Finally, a swamp is a type of wetland dominated by woody plants.
28. Thought Patterns in Textbooks Textbook authors use transitions to make relationships between ideas clear and easy to understand.
Often authors mix organizational patterns in the same passage or paragraph.
The effective reader looks for the author’s primary pattern of organization.
29. Chapter Review Transitions are words and phrases that show the relationships between ideas.
A thought pattern is established by using transitions to show the logical relationship between ideas in a paragraph or passage.
Narration and process are two uses of the time order thought pattern.
Transitions of time signal that the writer is describing when something occurred.
In addition to showing a chain of events, the time order pattern is used to show steps, stages, or directions that can be repeated at any time with similar results.
30. Chapter Review Transitions of addition, such as and, also, and furthermore, are generally used to indicate a listing pattern.
Authors use the classification pattern to sort ideas into smaller groups and describe the traits for each group.
Examples of classification signal words are first type, second kind, or another group.
The spatial order pattern allows authors to describe a person, place, or thing based on its location or the way it is arranged in space.
Some of the words used to establish the space order pattern include adjacent, below, and underneath.
31. Practice