The main character of a story- usually the "good guy" but can also be a villian.
What is the protagonist?
a struggle between a character and another from the story
What is character vs. character?
definition of text structure
how the text is organized or written by the author
theme vs. main idea
a lesson that can be applied to many things learned from a text vs. a specific statement about what happened in one text-only for that text
Identify the 2 marshmallows, the decoy, and then find your answer.
The opposing force of the main character
What is the antagonist?
a struggle between a character and their internal thoughts and/or feelings
character vs. self
types of text structure
discription, cause and effect, problem and solution, sequence, compare and contrast
text features vs. text structure
qualities vs. organization
RACCE Response
What is a 2 point question?
Also known as qualities of a character- what makes that character who they are
What is characteristics or traits?
a struggle between a character and the environment around them
character vs. nature
key words for text structure
Parts of a Plot Mountain in Order
Intro
Rising Action
Climax
Falling Action
Resolution
The reqirements for a 2 pt response
Answer- Inference
2 details that prove the answer- relevant
What is a flat character?
a struggle between a character and their community, culture, society, "norms"- what is considered normal or acceptable
character vs. society
title and subtitles
other text features
bolded words
things that repeat
literal vs. inference
right there vs. connection to prior knowledge
The ways to get points on a 4 pt response
Introduction and Conclusion
Organization
Connections and Inferences
Spelling
The Introduction
a struggle between a character and something they have no control over
fate, destiny, God?
strategy used to find the meaning of a new word
context clues
words that can be used to represent connections between and within a text
relationship
physical connection
cause/effect
problem/solution
sequence
part of
compare/contrast
in/on
Intro- Introduce the texts and authors and/or restate the questions without the answer.
Conclusion- Restate the intro in one new sentence, add an explination sentence "Why does this make sense?" (Argue its right in one sentence)