Narrative
Techniques

Poetic Techniques
Informational/
Text Structure

Argument & Evidence

Vocabulary

100

What point of view uses "I" and is told by a character in the story?

First-person point of view

100

What is vivid language that appeals to the five senses called?

Imagery (sensory language)

100

What type of supporting detail includes facts, statistics, and research?

Evidence-based information

100

What do we call the author's opinion or belief that they try to prove in argumentative writing?

Claim

100

Define "corroborate" in one sentence.

Corroborate = to support with evidence or proof

200

Identify the technique when a story jumps back to events that already happened.

Flashback

200

Which poetic device directly compares two unlike things using "like" or "as"?

Simile

200

Name the text structure that organizes events in time order (uses words like first, then, finally).

Chronological order (sequence)

200

What is a counterclaim?

A counterclaim is an opposing opinion to the claim

200

Use "prevailing" correctly in a short sentence about opinions in class.

  • Example: "The prevailing opinion in class is that we should have Fun Friday."

300

Which narrative technique gives hints about events that will happen later in the story?

Foreshadowing

300

What is the device that gives human qualities to nonhuman things?

Personification

300

Which text structure explains why something happened and what resulted from it?

Cause and effect

300

Name two types of evidence an author can use to support a claim.

Facts, statistics, research data, expert opinions

300

Which vocabulary word from the sheet reference worksheet means "to support with evidence or proof"? (one-word answer)

Corroborate

400

Name the term for the narrator's perspective when the story uses "he," "she," or "they" and is not a character telling the story.

Third-person point of view

400

Identify the poetic device that uses words whose sounds imitate their meaning.

Onomatopoeia

400

What structure compares similarities and differences between two topics?

Compare and contrast

400

What should you evaluate to decide whether an author's argument is strong (two things)?

Evaluate the relevance/sufficiency of evidence and the soundness of the reasoning (also consider source credibility).

400

Explain how knowing domain-specific vocabulary helps a reader understand informational text (one short paragraph).

Knowing domain-specific vocabulary clarifies precise meanings and helps readers follow an author's argument or explanations (accept short paragraph).

500

Describe how an author can show a character’s development using dialogue, pacing, and description (name the general label for these techniques).

Narrative techniques

500

Explain the difference between tone and mood in a poem.

Tone = author's/poet's attitude

Mood = the feeling the reader gets

500

Describe the problem/solution text structure and give one classroom-appropriate example topic.

Problem/solution organizes a text by presenting a problem and one or more solutions (example: a passage about reducing school waste and suggested recycling programs).

500

Describe how a writer should present a claim, evidence, and a counterclaim in one organized paragraph.

Claim: School should start later. Evidence: Studies show teens need more sleep (cite facts). Counterclaim: Some say later start times affect after-school jobs. Response: Schools can adjust schedules or provide flexible job times.

500

Create a sentence that uses both "corroborate" and "prevailing" correctly and clearly.

Example sentence: "The prevailing opinion that we should study more was corroborated by survey data showing most students wanted extra review." (Accept similar correct uses.)

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