Informational Review
Argumentative Review
Figurative Language
Story Elements
Extras
100

Should informational writing be OBJECTIVE or SUBJECTIVE?

Objective.

100

The opinion you're arguing is...

The claim.

100

The difference between a simile and a metaphor.

Simile: Uses like/as

Metaphor: Does not use like/as

100

The order of events in a story.

Plot

100

A word to describe a character that changes throughout the story. 

Dynamic

200

What's the purpose of an informational text?

To teach the reader/viewer about a topic.

200

A counterclaim is comprised of...

The concession and the rebuttal.

200

The use of words that sound like what the mean.

Onomatopoeia

200

The when AND where of a story.

Setting

200

The difference between foreshadowing and flashback. 

Foreshadowing: Looking into the future.

Flashback: Looking into the past.

300

Give an example of a text FEATURE.

Headings/subheadings, TOC, index, glossary

300

What is kairos?

The timeliness/occasion of your argument.

300

A phrase made up of two seemingly opposite words.

Oxymoron

300

The theme of a story is defined as...

An overall lesson/moral/overarching idea.

300

The difference between mood and tone.

Mood: How the READER feels.

Tone: How the AUTHOR feels.

400

Give an example of a text STRUCTURE.

Compare and contrast, descriptive, chronological, cause and effect

400

Define call to action.

Here's what I've told you, and here's what I want you to do about it.

400
What is an example of parallelism?

Answers vary.

400

Pronouns that are used with first, second, and third POV.

First: I, me, my

Second: You, your

Third: He/She, They/Them

400

The point of highest action or change in the story.

Climax

500

Describe an annotated bibliography.

A document created to help the research process. It causes you to think about the material and how you plan to use it in your later paper. 

500

What information is needed for an in-text citation?

(Author's Lase Name Pg. #)

500

What is it called when we specifically appeal to a reader/viewer's senses?

Imagery.

500

Name a type of conflict.

Man vs. man

Man vs. self

Man vs. society

Man vs. nature

Man vs. technology

Man vs. supernatural

500

Dramatic irony is defined as...

When WE (the audience/reader/viewer) know something the characters in the story don't.