This point of view uses “I” or “we.”
What is first-person?
The lesson or message of a story.
What is theme?
Proof from the story used to support an idea.
What is text evidence?
The most intense moment of the story.
A comparison using “like” or “as.”
What is a simile?
This point of view uses “he,” “she,” or “they.”
What is third-person?
Why “friendship” is NOT a theme.
What is it is only one word?
Strong evidence is best described as this.
What is specific and relevant?
The part of the plot where the problem begins.
What is the beginning?
Giving human traits to non-human things.
What is personification?
This point of view limits the reader to one character’s thoughts.
What is third-person limited?
The story shows the importance of telling the truth.
What is honesty is important?
Text evidence can be a quote or ______.
What is a paraphrase?
A summary should include these three things.
What are main characters, conflict, and important events?
Language that creates pictures in the reader’s mind.
What is imagery?
This point of view can create suspense because the reader knows only what the narrator knows.
What is first-person?
The best way to determine a story’s theme.
What is looking at the conflict and major events?
After giving text evidence, you should do this.
What is explain how it supports your idea?
One thing that should NEVER be in a summary.
What are opinions or extra details?
A character who does NOT change.
What is a static character?
This point of view would best explain why the narrator might be unreliable.
What is first-person?
This helps ensure your theme matches the story.
What is main conflict?
This makes text evidence weak.
What is giving opinions instead of details?
This helps you decide which events are most important.
What is the main conflict?
A character who changes throughout the story.
What is a dynamic character?