Reading Prose & Poetry
Reading Informational Text
Vocabulary
Figurative Language
Text Structures
100

What is a setting?

A setting is where the story takes place. 

100

What is a text feature?

NOT EXAMPLES

the components of a story or article that are not the main body of text 

100

What does analyze mean?

To study or examine something in detail

100

What is a simile? 

A comparison of two unlike things, often introduced by like or as. 

100

What is description?

Information is presented in sections that often begin with a central idea and are followed by an elaboration of the features, characteristics, or examples of the subject at hand.

200

Plot contains these three things

Rising Action

Climax

Resolution 

200

What is the central idea?

the most important or central thoughts unifying elements of a text

200
What is a character?

one of the individuals in a work of fiction. 

200

What is personification? 

Representing a thing or idea as a person. 

200

What is problem and solution?

Information is conveyed as an issue, or a problem of concern and solution(s) are proposed or explained. 

300

What is a theme?

A theme is the underlying message or big idea of a talk, book, fil or other work. 

300

What is an author's perspective?

in informational text, the author’s attitude toward a topic or 

subject 

in literary text, a character’s attitude 

300

What is an illustration?

a picture or diagram that explains or decorates

300

What is a metaphor?

A word or phrase for one thing that is used to refer to another thing in order to show or suggest they are similar. 

300

What is compare and contrast?

The similarities and/or differences of two or more people things, concepts, or ideas. 

400

What is a narrator?

A narrator is the person telling the story. 

400

What is an author's claim?

to say that something is true or is a fact, although you cannot prove it and other people might not believe it a statement that something is true or is a fact, although other people might not believe it

400

What is a primary source?

Sources such as diaries, speeches, interviews, letters etc that were written by someone who experienced the event.

400

What is an idiom?

A expression that cannot be understood from the meanings of its separate words but must be learned as a whole. 

400

What is cause and effect?

Information reflects a causal relationship. The description of what happened is the effect and the detail(s) related to why it happened is the cause.

500

What is Point of View?

1st person, 2nd person, or 3rd person

A way of looking at or thinking about something. 

500

What is chronological order?

Facts, events, or details are presented in the order in which they occurred in time. *

500

What is a secondary source?

sources created by someone who did not experience the event firsthand

500

What is alliteration?

The repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighboring words or syllables. 

500

What is sequence? 

Information is presented as a series of instructions or steps in a process. 

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