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Reading Information and the USA Today Project. What do I need to know?. What do you Know already?. Class KWL on Informational Reading-What do you know ? What do you want to know ? When the music starts, transition into your group.
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Reading Information and the USA Today Project What do I need to know?
What do you Know already? • Class KWL on Informational Reading-What do you know? What do you want to know? • When the music starts, transition into your group. • In your group, read the following article and complete the “ANALYZING A FEATURE ARTICLE FORMAT” together: Are you losing your voice mail? • Don’t talk smack....Bring it on BACK!
ANALYZING A FEATURE ARTICLE FORMAT Title of Article: _____________________________________________________ Author: ___________________________________________Date: _____ Connected to content in: Math____ Social Studies____ Science____ Other (list content):_________________________________ Audience (Who does the author want to read the article?): ______________________________________ Purpose (Why did the author write this article?): _____________________________________________ Write a summary of the article in paragraph format. Be sure to include the details of the Handy Dandy Hand (5Ws and 1H-Who?, What?, When?, Where?, Why? and How?): ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Examining the lead - Explain how the article tries to "hook" your interest: ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Examining the text features - List any text features the author uses to help make the article more interesting or informative. (Examples - headings, lists, charts, graphs, diagrams, captions): _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Make a connection - Explain why this article was interesting to you. How does it connect to your own experience(s)?: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Analyzing A Feature Article Format Enter the CORRECT information: • Title of Article: Are you losing your voice mail? • Author: Roger Yu • Date: Sept. 4, 2012
Audience Who does the author want to read the article? • Adults • Children • Teens • Age/gender/ethnicity/etc.
Purpose • Why did the author write this article? • Was it written to persuade, to inform/explain, to entertain, or to express/share thoughts or feelings about an issue or event?
Writing a summary of the article in paragraph format • Be sure to include the details of the Handy Dandy Hand. • 5Ws and 1H- Who?, What?, When?, Where?, Why? and How? • A paragraph must be at least 5 complete sentences in length.
Examining the lead • Explain how the article tries to "hook" your interest. • Sample “hook”-Title-Shelter destroyed by tornadoor picture-
Examining the text features & graphic aids • List any text features the author uses to help make the article more interesting or informative. • Examples - headings, subheadings, pictures, lists, charts, graphs, diagrams, captions, tables, timelines, etc. • How do they help the reader understand the material more easily?
Making a connection • Explain why this article was interesting to you. • How does it connect to your own experience(s)? • A text is more meaningful when you connect to it personally.
Additional Information: • Text Structure • Main Idea • Tone
Text Structure • Text structure can be defined as the pattern or organization of writing. Graphic organizer can help you evaluate writing too. • Writers of informational texts often use: • Chronological order • Sequential order • Compare-and-contrast organization • Cause-and-effect organization • Problem-solution order • Proposition-support organization
Main Idea • The main idea, or central idea, is the MOST important idea about a topic that a writer or speaker conveys. • The main idea can be the central idea of an entire work or of just a paragraph. • The main idea can be expressed in the topic sentence of a paragraph or simply implied or suggested by details. • Finding the main idea may require you to infer. Inferences require you to make a logical guess based on facts and one’s own knowledge or experience.
Tone • The tone of the work expresses the writer’s attitude toward his or her subject. • Words such as angry, sad, happy, humorous, and excited could be used to describe different tones.
What did you Learn about informational reading? • Let’s go back to the KWL chart and complete it!
THE END! **Turn in all of the following before you leave class today: “Analyzing a Feature Article Format” for the articles: 1) Are you losing your voice mail? & 2) NFL players at greater risk for brain disease, study says 3) Self & Peer assessment of collaborative group work