Story Elements
Story Elements Part 2:
Fact Trackers
Leap Logic
Test-taking Strategies
Writing
Vocabulary
100

The people, animals, or creatures that act out the events in a story.

  • Who are the characters?

100

Person who writes the story?

What is the author

100

The most important point an author is making in an informational text or paragraph.

What is the main idea?

100

On the LEAP test, if a question has a Part A asking for an answer, you know it will almost always have this right after asking for evidence.

What is a Part B?

100

If you are stuck on a multiple-choice question, you should cross out the answers you know are definitely wrong. This strategy is called the process of...

 What is elimination?

100

When writing an opinion essay, you must clearly state how you feel or what you think in the very first paragraph. This is called stating your...

What is opinion (or claim)?

100

The puppy was very timid, hiding under the couch every time the loud doorbell rang." Based on the clues, timid means this.

What is scared (or shy / fearful)?

200

Where and when a story takes place.

What is the setting?

200

The person who is telling the story?

What is narrator?

200

Photographs, captions, headings, and bold words are all examples of these visual tools in an informational text.

What are text features?

200

If a prompt asks you to look closely at how two things are alike or similar, it wants you to do this.

What is compare?

200

When taking a timed LEAP test, if you don't know the answer to a hard question after trying for a few minutes, you should use this computer tool to remind yourself to come back to it later.

What is the flag (or bookmark) button?

200

 In a narrative essay, words like first, next, suddenly, and finally help move the story along. They are called these types of words.

What are transition words?

200

"The scientist used a microscope to look at the tiny bug because it was too small to see with her own eyes." Based on the clues, a microscope is this.

What is a tool used to see very small things?

300

The big lesson, moral, or takeaway the author wants you to learn from reading the story.

 What is the central message (or theme)?

300

A problem in the story?

What is Conflict?

300

Words like First, Next, Then, and Finally show that a text is using this type of structure.

What is sequence (or chronological order)?

300

When a LEAP question has square checkboxes and asks you to select "two" answers, you must click exactly this many boxes to get it right.

 What is two?

300

Reading the prompt carefully and highlighting or underlining exactly what it is asking you to do is known as this strategy.

What is unpacking (or breaking down) the prompt?

300

When writing an informational essay, your main goal is to do this for the reader, not to tell a made-up story.

What is teach (or inform/explain)?

300

"Unlike her brother who was always loud and running around, Sarah was very serene." The clue word "unlike" helps you figure out serene means this.

What is calm (or quiet / peaceful)?

400

Words like brave, greedy, or patient that describe a character's personality based on their actions and words.

What are character traits?

400

A picture, drawing, or diagram that helps tell a story, explain a concept, or make a book more interesting.

What is a "illustration"

400

The reason something happens is the cause, and what happens as a result is called this.

What is the effect?

400

This is the word used in a prompt when you need to show how two things are different.

What is contrast?

400

Before clicking "submit" on your typed LEAP essay, you should always take time to do this to fix your spelling, punctuation, and capitalization mistakes.

What is proofread (or edit)?

400

When doing research to write a report, you must gather facts from books, articles, or websites. These materials are called your..

What are sources?

400

"We had an abundant harvest this year, gathering baskets and baskets full of ripe tomatoes, corn, and green beans." Based on the clues, abundant means this.

What is plentiful (or a lot / more than enough)?

500

 The series of events in a story, which usually includes a problem and a solution.

What is the plot?

500

Something a character does

What are actions?

500

The specific details, quotes, or facts from the text that you use to prove your answer is correct.

What is text evidence?

500

In a LEAP written response, you should always restate the prompt to create this very first sentence of your paragraph.

What is a topic sentence?

500

You should always do this to before you read the text?

What is "read the directions and question"

500

A narrative story often includes characters talking to each other. You must put these punctuation marks around the exact words they say

What are quotation marks?

500

"The hiker was parched after walking in the hot desert sun for three hours without his water bottle." Based on the clues, parched means this.

What is very thirsty?

600

Words like happy, sad, angry, excited, surprised that describes how a character feels.

What is character feelings
600

What is the format of a paragraph?

What is a

topic sentence

evidence , explain

evidence , explain

evidence, explain

closing sentence

600

If a question asks what a character will "most likely" do next, you have to use text clues to make a smart guess, which is also called this.

What is an inference (or a prediction)?

600

When writing a narrative essay, you write in what person?

What is "first person"

600

In Language Arts, you should provide ______ pieces of evidence.

What is "3"

700

The reason a character does something in the story?

What is "motivations"

700

What is the format of a letter?

What is a 

heading (dear ____,)

body

ending (signature)

700

True or False: A essay has 2 or more paragraphs in it and you shouldn't close the essay out until the very last paragraph?

What is "true"