Reading Literature
Reading Informational Text
Grammar & Language
Writing
Vocabulary
100

What do we call the person who tells the story?

The Narrator

100

What is the main idea of a nonfiction text?

What the text is mostly about

100

What punctuation mark ends a question?

A question mark (?)

100

What are the three parts of a paragraph?

Topic sentence, supporting details, concluding sentence

100

What does synonym mean?

A word that means the same or nearly the same

200

What is a theme in literature?

A lesson or message the author wants the reader to learn

200

What are text features? Give two examples.

Extra parts of a text that help you understand it; e.g. headings, captions

200

What’s a conjunction? Give an example.

A word that connects words or ideas; e.g., and, but, or

200

What’s the purpose of an opinion essay?

To share your opinion and give reasons and evidence

200

What is a prefix? Give an example.

A word part added to the beginning of a word; e.g. un-, re-

300

How do you find the meaning of unfamiliar words in a fiction story?

Use context clues from the sentence or paragraph

300

Why do authors use cause and effect in informational texts?

To show why something happened and what happened as a result

300

Which sentence is written in the past tense? “I walk home” or “I walked home”?

“I walked home”

300

What makes a good introduction in writing?

A hook, background info, and a clear thesis

300

What does the word context mean when talking about vocabulary in a sentence?

The words and sentences around a word that help you figure out its meaning

400

Name one way a narrator’s point of view can affect how the story is told.

It affects what the reader knows and feels about events or characters

400

How do you compare two articles on the same topic?

Look at their main ideas, evidence, and structure

400

What’s the difference between a simile and a metaphor?

A simile uses like/as, a metaphor says one thing is another

400

Why is revising your writing important?

It helps improve ideas, organization, and word choice

400

What does “figurative language” mean?

Language that uses creative comparisons, not literal meanings

500

Explain how two characters can respond differently to the same event.

Their personalities, experiences, or motivations influence their reactions

500

What does it mean to explain how an author supports a point?

You describe the evidence and reasoning used to back up their claim

500

What is a preposition?

Shows the relationship between words (position something is in- ex: under the table)

500

What is a transitional phrase, and why use it?

Words that connect ideas; they make writing flow smoothly

500

What does the word analyze mean in reading?

To examine closely to understand better