Text Features
PIE - Author's Purpose
Compare and Contrast
Point of View
Vocabulary
100

Appear in nonfiction texts, such as headings, captions, glossaries, and diagrams, that help a reader understand the main idea and important details.

What are text features?

100

Every author's has a purpose for writing a story or article. What is a synonym for purpose?

Reason

100

Ms. Robbie wants to read two stories, one fiction, one nonfiction. She then wants you to find the similarities and differences between the two. What is that called?

Comparing and Contrasting

100
Every story has a narrator. What is the term that tells us how a story is told. 

Point of view

100

Words have similar and opposite meanings, what do we call them? 

Example nice: kind  kind: rude

Synonyms and antonyms

200

This is the feature that explains what a photograph or illustration shows and how it connects to the main text.

What is a caption?

200

If an author wrote an article about wanting to change the driving age from 16 to 18, what would be the author's purpose?

To persuade or convince 

200

Even though nonfiction and fiction are written differently, they could share the same what?

Main idea or theme

200

"My friends and I got into a huge fight. I know I shouldn't have yelled at Kate, but I just got so mad."

(Bonus points for identifying the pronouns of this point of you/how you know!)

First Person 

I, me, my we, 

200

In the sentence, "The old house was decrepit; its porch was rotting and the roof had holes!" What would a synonym for decrepit be?

Weak, frail, out of shape, old

300

What text feature help you visually understand or make connections to the text?

A diagram, graph, map, and picture 

300

Dr. Seuss writes books like Hop on Pop and Green Eggs and Ham. These books have silly rhymes and illustrations. What is his author's purpose?

To entertain
300

You're reading a nonfiction and fiction text on the same topic for a project, what might be some differences in the two books?

The author's purpose will be different. One may have text features while the other doesn't.

300

Why is first person point of view important?

It describes the story from the characters direct point of view. The reader connects with the character.

300

Give an antonym for the word fragile (meaning easily broken).

Sturdy, strong, durable 

400

Name two different purposes of boldface, italics, and underlined type in a nonfiction article.

To show that information is important and to identify key words.

400

You're doing a project on Mr. Beast. You need to have a section on your poster about his charity work. What kind of text should you look for to get the facts you need. 

An informational article 

400

How are chapters in novels and subheadings in an informational text similar?

They both tell the reader what the next section of the reading is about.

400

Explain the difference between third person limited and third person omniscient.

Even though the narrator is outside of both point of views, third person limited's narrator only knows one character's thoughts, feeling, and actions. While third person omniscient's narrator, is all knowing and has access to every character's actions, thoughts, and feelings.

400

If someone is unremarkable identify the prefix, root, and suffix. Then give a meaning.

Prefix - un Root - remark Suffix - able

To be uninteresting/not make an impression 

500

How does an author's use of subheadings assist readers?

By organizing each new set of paragraphs and letting the reader know what they'll read about next.

500

Name 3 examples of an informational text (hint teaching you how to do something)

Recipes, instruction manual, etc

500

How could the scenes of a play and the stanzas (lines) of a poem  be similar?

They could both express the main idea of the story in a detailed way. 

500

x2 Points

With your group/partner, come up with a written example pf third person omniscient point of view. 

Answers will vary

500

Write a sentence using the word intermission used correctly.

Answers will vary