Reading Skills
Vocabulary & Language
Text Structure
Critical Thinking
100

What is theme of a story?

The lesson learned or moral of the story.

100

What is a simile?

A figure of speech that directly compares two different things, usually using the connecting words "like," "as," or "than".

100

What is author’s purpose?

What the author wants you to understand or take in from the story. The "why" a writer writes a story.

100

What does it mean to summarize a text?


Taking a long story or article and shortening it to just the most important points in your own words

200

Which point of view uses the words “he,” “she,” or “they”?

3rd person point of view

200

What are context clues?

Hints found in the words, sentences, and images surrounding an unknown word that help a reader figure out its meaning.

200

What is the subject of this sentence? "Running through the park, the small dog chased the ball."

The small dog.


200

Why is it important to use text evidence when answering questions?

It proves your answer is right, and shows you truly understand the story.

300

What does it mean to infer?

To read between the lines.

300

What is a homophone?

Homophones are words that sound exactly the same when spoken, but have different spellings and different meanings.

300

What makes a conclusion effective?

Your conclusion gives your reader something to take away and summarizes the text.

300

What is the difference between the main idea of a paragraph and a supporting detail?

The main idea is the most important point or the "big picture" message of a paragraph, while supporting details are the facts, examples, or evidence that prove or explain that point.

400

What is the climax of a story?

The big "turning point" where the main character finally faces their biggest problem.

400

Neither the teacher nor the students ______ going on the field trip. (is/are)

are

400

If a word has the prefix “un-,” what does it usually mean?

“not,” “opposite of,” or “the reverse of”

400

If you encounter an unfamiliar word in a text, what are two specific strategies you can use to determine its meaning without a dictionary?

Analyze surrounding context clues for synonyms, antonyms, or definitions, and break the word down into its prefix, root, and suffix to deduce its meaning based on familiar word parts.

500

What is foreshadowing?

When an author gives small hints or clues about what will happen later in a story.

500

Identify the synonym for "vivid"

bright

500

Name FIVE types of text structure

description, compare and contrast, order and sequence, cause and effect, problem and solution.

500

What makes a strong written response?

Restate, Answer, Cite Evidence, Explain. Response is  organized, uses good details, and has proper grammar.

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