Feature Presentation (Text Features)
The Building Blocks (Text Structures)
The Summary Squad (Objective Writing)
Show Me the Evidence (RACES Strategy)
Annotation Station (Active Reading)
100

This feature is found at the beginning of a book and lists page numbers for each section.

(What is a Table of Contents?)

100

This structure explains how two or more things are alike and how they are different.

(What is Compare and Contrast?)

100

When writing a summary, you must stay "this," meaning you are neutral and don't take sides.

(What is Objective?)

100

The "R" in the RACES writing strategy stands for this.

(What is Restate the question?)

100

This is the first text feature a reader sees and should label. 

(What is a title?)

200

These are words found next to or underneath a photo that explain what the image is.

(What is a Caption?)

200

This structure lists dates or events in the exact order they occurred.

(What is Chronological?)

200

To maintain a professional feel, your summary should use this type of "tone." 

(What is a Formal Tone?)

200

The "C" in RACES reminds you to do this to prove your point.

(What is Cite Evidence?)

200

Identifying these while reading helps you understand how the author organized the information.

(What are the text structures?) 
300

This feature provides a list of higher-level terms and their definitions, usually at the back of the book.

(What is a Glossary?)

300

This structure presents an issue and follows it up with ways to resolve it.

(What is Problem and Solution?)

300

This is the term for being one-sided or favoring one point of view over another.

(What is Bias?)

300

When you explain how your evidence proves your answer, you are completing this letter of RACES.

(What is "E"?) *

300

When you see a word you don't know or a "higher-level" term, you should do this.

(What is use context clues to determine the unknown word's meaning?) 

400

This organizes information into a preview of what a specific section of the text will be about.

(What is a Title or Subtitle?) 

400

When one event makes another thing happen, the author is using this structure.

(What is Cause and Effect?)

400

An objective summary should be written in this "Point of View" (no "I" or "me").

(What is Third Person?)

400

This is the type of question you use the RACES writing strategy for. 

(What is an open-ended question?)

400

This is what should be written after reading the entire article. 

(What is a brief objective summary and/or the central idea?) 

500

These two types of visual aids show data or statistics.

(What are Charts and Graphs?)

500

This structure provides a very detailed account that discusses specific traits of a person, place, or thing.

(What is Description?)

500

This is the "gist" or the overall point the author is trying to make in a text.

(What is the Central Idea?)

500

To "Summarize" or "Check" your work is the final step, represented by this letter.

(What is "S"?)

500

While reading, it is important the readers label these five things. 

(What are the WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, and WHY of the article?)

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