Text Structure
Night Lights Have a Dark Side
Central Idea
Comparisons and Analogies
Literary Devices & Logical Fallacies
100

This structure presents the relationship between a specific event, or idea and the events that follow it. 

Cause and Effect

100

What is the Central Idea of the text?

The Artificial Lights that humans flood the world with affects the functions of people, animals and plants alike

100

True or False: Central Idea is always obvious and explicitly stated by the author

False. Sometimes it is implied

100

What is the difference between an analogy and a simile/metaphor?

Similes/metaphors compare two things but do not explain. Analogies show how two things are alike, but also explain/make a point

100

Giving life like qualities to inanimate objects 

Personification

200

In this text structure, the author talks about one thing in great detail

Description

200

How does the author prove that light pollution is a real problem?

The author brings in expert's insights and scientific studies

200

What is the difference between Central Idea and Theme?

Central idea is the main point an author is making. Theme is a moral, message or lesson learned about life

200

Why is making comparisons important?

It enables you to see familiar things in new ways

200

What is the definition of Ad Hominem?

Attacking the person directly instead of the argument they are making

300

How does text structure contribute to author's purpose?

Text structure (The way author's organize their writing) helps readers understand the information better and the point the author is trying to make

300

What text structure does the author use?

Problem and solution

300

3 things to look for when identifying Central Idea

1. Topic of the passage

2. Author's central idea about topic

3. Info the author uses to help develop this idea (stats, facts, etc.)

300

What does this analogy tell us: “What you’re doing is as useful as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.”

It tells us that the first task is useless—by comparing it to a similarly useless task, such as rearranging deck chairs on a ship that famously sank into the sea

300

Scenes that show an event that happened in a character’s past, providing clues to the present story

Flashback

400

When students read or write a text with this structure, order is key

Sequence

400
What does the author do to engage the reader at the beginning of the text?

She uses anecdotes (personal stories) about an earthquake in 1994 to hook the reader

400

Difference between topic and central idea

Topic:The general subject of a paragraph or essay

Central idea: What the author wants you to know about the topic

400

Comparisons and analogies are rarely used in real life

False you dorks. We use them everyday, sometimes without thinking about it

400

Difference between Mood vs. Tone

Mood:the way a piece of writing makes a reader feel.

Tone: the author’s attitude

500

What role do sentences play in a paragraph?

Sentences in a paragraph develop and refine, or explain more completely, a key concept about the text's topic

500

What is the author's attitude toward light pollution?

The author is optimistic. She tells us how light disrupts the function of humans and animals, but is ultimately a problem we can fix. 

500

The central idea is always directly stated in the beginning of a text


False

500

Why analyze comparisons and analogies in a text?

You can uncover additional layers of meaning in the author's writing

500

An argument that jumps to the worst possible scenario immediately

Slippery Slope Fallacy

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