MAIN IDEA & SUMMARY
TEXT EVIDENCE & INFERENCES
THEME & CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT
AUTHOR’S CRAFT & STRUCTURE
COMPARE ACROSS TEXTS
100

What must a strong summary always include?

The central idea and most important key details — not minor examples or opinions.

100

What makes a piece of text evidence strong?

It directly supports the claim or inference being made.

100

What is a theme?

A lesson or message about life supported by the text.

100

Why do authors choose a specific point of view?

To control what the reader knows and feels.

100

What does it mean to compare texts?

Identify similarities and differences in ideas or themes.

200

Why should a summary avoid quotations?

A summary should be written in the student’s own words.

200

What is an inference?

A logical conclusion based on evidence plus prior knowledge.

200

Why are themes rarely stated directly?

Readers must infer them from events, actions, and outcomes.

200

How does third-person point of view help develop characters?

It shows actions, thoughts, and how others view the character.


200

Why must comparison answers reference both texts?

Because both sources are required to support the idea.

300

Which detail should be excluded from a summary?

Examples that support a point but are not central to the main idea.

300

Why must inferences always be supported by evidence?

Without evidence, it becomes an opinion.

300

What does character response to conflict usually reveal?

The character’s values and growth.

300

What is the purpose of a climax in a narrative?

It reveals the most important decision or change.

300

What is a common comparison point across genres?

Theme, response to conflict, or message.

400

How can identifying the main idea help with later questions?

It helps answer inference, evidence, and comparison questions accurately.

400

How do you eliminate weak evidence options?

Remove choices that are vague, unrelated, or too general.

400

Why is a theme statement written as a sentence, not a word?

Because themes express ideas, not topics.

400

Why might an author include expert quotations?

To build credibility and support claims.

400

How do informational and literary texts often overlap?

Both can explore similar ideas using different structures.

500

What is the difference between topic and main idea?

Topic = subject; Main idea = what the author says about the subject.

500

If two answers seem correct, how do you choose the best one?

Select the one that most directly proves the claim.

500

How does overcoming conflict connect to theme?

The way a character changes shows the message of the story.

500

How does structure affect meaning?

It helps readers understand cause-and-effect or progression of ideas.

500

What is the biggest mistake in compare questions?

Summarizing only one text.

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