What is a question?
Text that provides a clue to the meaning of a word through contrast
What is a contrast context clue?
A quality that defines certain types of writing
What is a genre characteristic?
To ask and answer questions before, during, and after reading a text
What is generate questions?
Collecting relevant information as you read that will help you understand and build on information that is introduced earlier in the text
What is synthesizing?
To say something in return; to answer or reply
What is a response?
Text to provide a clue to the meaning of the word through a comparison
What is comparison context clue?
A part of the text that is not the main body of the text, such as the table of contents, a header, or a visual element
What is a text feature?
The reason for or goal of doing something
What is a purpose?
Being aware of what you do and don't understand throughout a text that can help you focus on areas that you may need to reread or apply additional strategy to understand a text completely
What is monitoring comprehension?
The act of making a judgement or decision about something
What is an evaluation?
To determine something not stated directly by using reasoning and evidence from the text
What is to infer?
Ways to approach a text that can help you make meaning of the words on a page
What are reading comprehension strategies?
When you establish a reason why you want to read something
A reader's question or comment about a text written a directly on the text
What is Annotation?
Text that provides a clue to the meaning of a word through one or more examples
What is an example context clue?
A logical guess about what the future events might happen in a story, what information a text might provide, or what points an author might make in an argument
What is a prediction?
Creating pictures in your head that help you determine what an author or poet is describing
What is visualizing?
What is track?
A hint surrounding text that can help a reader infer the meaning of the word, phrase or description
What is a context clue?
When an author doesn't explicitly state ideas and allows you to interpret a text's hidden meeting
What is making inferences?