This literary element includes characters, setting, and plot.
Story Elements
This point of view allows the narrator to know the thoughts of all characters
Third Person omniscient
When citing evidence, you should include this detail from the text (page number or paragraph).
Page number or Paragraph Number
When an author implies something but does not state it directly, the reader must do this.
Infer
This is the turning point or most intense moment in a story.
Climax
This point of view uses “I” and tells the story from one character’s perspective.
first-person point of view
This type of evidence includes paraphrasing instead of quoting.
paraphrasing
This skill involves using clues from the text and prior knowledge to make a conclusion
making an inference
This is a struggle between opposing forces in a story
Conflict
This point of view uses “he,” “she,” or “they” and only reveals one character’s thoughts.
third-person limited
This is what you should do after presenting textual evidence in an answe
explaining how it supports your answer
This is the difference between inference and prediction
inference is based on evidence, prediction is about what will happen next
This should always support your inference when answering a question
Textual Evidence
This type of narrator is not part of the story.
third-person narrator
Strong textual evidence should be this (specific or vague?).
Specific
This reading strategy helps clarify confusing parts of a text.
Rereading
This literary device gives human qualities to nonhuman things.
Personification
first-person point of view
This is why citing multiple pieces of evidence strengthens an argument.
it makes the argument stronger/more credible?
This question type often begins with “What can you conclude…?”
inference question