Text Structures
Text Features
Facts and Opinions
Informational Authors Use...
Reading Between the Lines
100

A text that explains why something happened (like a wildfire) and the results of it (like loss of habitat) uses this structure.

What is cause and effect?

100

The text under a photograph or chart that explains what it is showing.

What is a caption?

100

A statement that can be proven true or false with objective evidence.

What is a fact?

100

A strong, one-sided preference that unfairly favors one person or idea over another.

What is bias?

100

The single sentence that best expresses what an article is mostly about.

What is the main idea (or central idea)?

200

This structure shows how two or more things are alike and different, using keywords like "similarly," "both," and "on the other hand."

What is compare and contrast?

200

An alphabetical list of important words and their definitions, usually found in the back of a textbook.

What is a glossary?

200

This type of fact is expressed in numbers, like "82% of users" or "a $1.5 million budget."

What is a statistic?

200

An author's attitude toward a subject (like "critical," "supportive," or "neutral"), which can reveal their bias.

What is the author's tone?

200

Facts, statistics, examples, and expert opinions that are used to support the main idea.

What are supporting details?

300

This structure identifies an issue, like plastic in the ocean, and then offers ways to fix it.

What is problem and solution?

300

This text feature breaks a long article into smaller sections and tells you what that section will be about.

What is a subheading (or heading)?

300

A statement that expresses a person's feelings, beliefs, or judgments and cannot be proven.

What is an opinion?

300

he emotional feeling or idea a word carries, like the difference between "thrifty" (positive) and "cheap" (negative).

What is connotation?

300

An educated guess or conclusion you make based on evidence from the text plus your own background knowledge.

What is an inference?

400

This text structure organizes events in the order they happened, using words like "first," "next," and "later."

What is chronological (or sequential) order?

400

This feature, often found in the back of a book, lists topics and the page numbers where you can find them.

What is an index?

400

Words like "best," "worst," "should," "awful," and "beautiful" are signal words for this.

What is an opinion?

400

The primary reason an author writes a text; in biased texts, this is almost always "to persuade."

What is the author's purpose?

400

To briefly restate the main points of a text in your own words.

What is to summarize?

500

An author using ethos, pathos, and logos is almost always writing with this primary purpose.

What is to persuade?

500

A chart that visually represents data, often using bars, lines, or circles.

What is a graph?

500

An opinion given by someone with special knowledge or credentials on a topic, like a scientist's analysis of data.

What is an expert opinion?

500

An appeal to the speaker's credibility, trustworthiness, or moral character.

What is ethos?

500

The single sentence, usually at the end of the introduction, that states the author's main argument or claim.

What is a thesis statement?

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