To find the main idea of an informational text, look for
A. who wrote the article and what company/universit they are from.
B. Why the text was written
C. What the author talks a lot about throughout the text
D. None of these
Which of the folllowing is not one of the three major elements that we look for when reading informational texts?
A. Main Idea
B. Explanation
C. Exposition
D. Application
Most reading strategies, according to the lecture, can be applied to literary as well as informational texts.
True or False
which underlined part of the word (INFORMATIONAL) tells us most about thee function of informational texts?
A. form
B. Inform
C. ation
D. tional
The strategies we use when reading informational texts are ________as/from when we read literary texts.
A. the same
B. different
C. Sometimes the same, sometimes differnt
The main objective of most informational texts is to entertain the reader
True or False
Informational texts includes which of the following
A. a setting
B. a conflict
C. a plot
D. an explanation
The application part of an informational texts tell us what the real world use is for the information thatis presented.
True or False
Which is not an informational texts?
A. Narrative
B. Article
C. Blog
D. Chart
My Answers: D,A,True,B,A,True,C,True & C
28 answers
Please repost with an asterisk * next to your choice of answer for each question.
A. a setting
B. a conflict
C. a plot
D. an explanation
b
true
c
d
a
b
c
A: blog discussing the benefits of growing your own food
B: a manual about car maintenance for car owners
C: a magazine article about fashion
D: a book about one fairy's struggle to save her home
E: a book about the history of space flight
plz?
An informational text is written using what? Select the two correct answers.(1 point)
statistics
facts
arguments
opinions
personal stories
1. What is an informational text? C:text providing information without opinions
2. What critical skills do you use to identify a claim? B: analyzing and evaluating evidence, arguments, claims, and beliefs.
3. How do you determine if your claim has substantial evidence? C: recognize weather excerpts make a relevant connection to the claim.
4. When reading an argument, why must you trace the claim? A: to follow whether or not the conclusion leads the audience to agree with the claim.
5. What pieces of information do you know to be true? A: Facts.
1.C
2.C
3.C (yes alot of C's ;-;)
4.B
5.B
Just so you know this is for the Evaluating Claims Quick Check.
2 the subject or focus
3 that it matches the type of information you are sharing
4 writing an introduction
2. details
3. introspection
4. Add more details
I hope this helps :)
Also, when people type the answer don't do a b c c, because every time someone loads into a quick check, the questions are mixed to prevent this.