Assessment
Review Objective:
This is your chance to show your understanding and skills
in thinking critically, deeply, strongly, effectively. You
have learned and practiced more skills needed to be an effective
reader. Now you can prove it to yourself!
You will be asked to demonstrate your skills in areas practiced
in Lessons 18, 19, and 20. There will be some multiple choice,
some short answer, and some extended response questions.
Warm up time! Let's do a quick review of objectives and tips
from each lesson to be sure you're prepared to do your best.
Activate what you already know so you do your best.
Read over the objectives and vocabulary for each lesson.
Lesson 18 - Review and
practice analyzing author's purpose,
viewpoint, tone, and persuasive devices used
to convince the chosen audience. You'll also
identify facts and opinions.
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Lesson 19- Identify
and analyze broader concepts such as making
generalizations and drawing conclusions, and evaluating
author's reasons and ideas from informational
texts.
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Lesson 20 - Identify
and evaluate connections between
informational texts and the broader
area of your own experience and knowledge
about life.
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Review the Tips and
Tools for each lesson. Remember, you'll find more
information on each lesson's page. This is just a summary
of key points. This is a good place to start, but you will
also want to go back and review the first page of each lesson.
Lesson 18: Analyzing Author's Purpose
What does it mean to talk about the author's purpose?
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The author's purpose answers the question .
. .Why?
Why
is the author writing this particular article, interview,
editorial, chart or graph?
Maybe . . . to inform, to persuade, to discourage,
to explain, to entertain, to describe, to demonstrate.
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Actively think about the audience the writer has chosen:
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Writers ask:
Who am I writing to? What response
do I want them to have to my writing? Do I want to give
them information to make a decision or complete a task?
Do I want to fire them up for action? Do I want to inspire
them?
Readers ask:
Who is the author writing to? Me or
another group of people? What response do they expect from
their readers or from me? Should I laugh, cry, scream in terror
or anger, jump up to fight for a cause, giggle, shudder, be
convinced or not, swell with pride or warm with compassion?
Should I be able to understand facts, or complete a task?
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Tone? What is it? How do I recognize author's tone?
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Writers
choose their words and details to create tone of voice.
Ask:
What
is the attitude of the writer? How does he feel about his
subject?
Tone
= words
chosen to convey attitude
or feeling toward
the subject
(angry, emotional, joyous,
scientific, disgusted, elated, sorrowful and on and on and
on . . .)
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How do I describe author's tone or attitude? Check the
TOOLS tab on the top navigation bar for a listing of attitude
words.
Don't believe everything you hear! Recognizing persuasion
- Authors use persuasive techniques to convince their
audience to join their side. They may want you to
adopt an opinion or belief, to buy a product, to join a
group, to change your life, your job, your car, your friends,
your hair color.
- Persuasive writing can be about an important idea,
such as Dr. Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream"
speech, inspiring his audience to join in Civil Rights action
for equality for all.
- It can also be superficial, such as advertising
persuading you to buy a certain hair product because superstar
do, implying you'll be just as cool as they are if you do.
- Watch for these persuasive devices:
- snob appeal: appealing to social or intellectual pretensions,
- endorsement: basing an argument on what a famous group
or person says,
- name calling: attacking a person rather than an issue,
- bandwagon: urging people to do something because everyone
is doing it,
- glittering generalities: using lofty ideas, such as
freedom, or equal rights, or groups, such as religion,
Civil Liberties, Green Peace, to support your cause.
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How do tell the difference between fact and opinion?
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A FACT is a true statement. FACTS can be proven by
data, scientific information, real events, and dates. Facts
can be checked. They are true.
An OPINION is a view or belief held by a person. A
good opinion may be based on facts, but it is not a fact itself.
If a statement is an opinion, it is likely there are people
who agree, and people who disagree. A strategy you might use
to determine if a statement is opinion or fact, might be to
ask if someone might have a different idea. If a different
idea is possible, or a disagreement might be stated, you are
dealing with an opinion. If there cannot be a disagreement,
you are probably dealing with a fact. For example:
Opinion:
- Dogs are loyal, easy to care for, and make the best
pets.
Facts:
- Dogs can be selectively bred to change their characteristics.
- Dogs have wider snouts and jaws than wolves.
- In 1959 a Russian scientist, Dmitry Belyaev, began an
experiment to find out if selective breeding could be
used to make a tame animal out of a wild animal.
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Lesson 19: Evaluating Reasons and Ideas
About active evaluation:
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You know a lot about evaluation already. When
you score your own writing, you are evaluating, or judging
it against a set of standards, or criteria.
Readers evaluate when they:
. . . compare, conclude, contrast, criticize,
describe, discriminate, explain, justify, interpret, relate,
summarize and support.
Evaluation is taking everything you know from the
informational text, and from life, and making a judgement:
- Are the reasons logical? Do they
make sense?
- Are conclusions presented by the
author supported with enough information?
- What is the value of the story?
To you? To the general reader?
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What questions can I ask to start my evaluation of a text?
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Remember when you evaluate, you should have a set of standards
to compare or judge the writing against. You might use these
questions as criteria.
Ask:
- Is the introduction clear? Do I know what I am going
to be reading about?
- What is the author's purpose? To explain, describe,
inform, persuade, entertain?
- Is the author qualified to write about the topic?
- Are the facts logical and informative? Do they support
the author's purpose?
- Does the author give me enough information to understand
the purpose?
- Is the audience for the article clear?
- Does the author assume the reader has any knowledge
about the subject?
- What kinds of words does the author choose? Why does
the author choose those words? What words might have been
chosen for a different audience?
- Does the author take a stand on a subject? Do I agree?
Why or why not?
- Do I want to talk with the author about the topic or
a related topic?
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Generalizations? What are they? How do I make or evaluate
generalizations?
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Generalizations are statements that apply to a whole group
of people or things. The word ALL is
a clue (All students can learn. All
drugs are harmful.), as well as the name of a group
of things (students, drugs),
such as people, animals, clouds, vegetables, school, cars,
musicians, clothing and the list could go on forever.
Watch for false generalizations.
Of course not all drugs are bad for
you; aspirin, allergy spray, and chemotheraphy have positive
effects if used as prescribed. Of course street drugs damage
the user.
Identify true or valid generalizations which must
be true for every individual or thing in the group. All
people need oxygen is a valid generalization because
there is not one human being who can live without oxygen.
Valid generalizations must have lots of evidence; they are
based on many many observations and experiences.
When you make a generalization from the events, characters,
or ideas in an informational passage, ASK:
- Is it true in all cases?
- Is there any case where it is not true?
- Is there evidence such as facts, examples, information
from experts, to prove the generalization is true?
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What do I need to know about drawing conclusions?
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Merriam Webster says when you draw a conclusion,
you make a thoughtful
decision about something, you think about the evidence (supporting
details and what you know) and reach a logically necessary
end by reasoning, you infer on the basis of evidence in the
story.
The two keys are:
- Evidence. Always always always be able to support
your conclusion with evidence from the text. Don't take
a side path and make statements that cannot be supported
with evidence from the text. Be able to prove it!
- Logic. A conclusion has to make sense. It has to
be reasonable. It has to be something you can explain clearly,
and a friend or teacher will say, "Oh, yes, I understand.
That makes total sense!"
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Lesson 20: Extending Information Beyond the Text
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The skills are the same as those reviewed in Lesson 19,
just remember that you'll be extending the ideas beyond the
literary selection into broader areas of experience and life.
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Questions
to think about to make connections between an informational
passage and your life:
- What do I already know about this topic?
- How does this information make me a more knowledgable
citizen and/or voter?
- How might this information help my school studies?
- Is the author biased in one way or another?
- Am I being persuaded to think in a certain way or to buy
something?
- How do the author's word choices affect his or her meaning
or my interpretation?
- Have my opinions changed as a result of this reading?
- Does this article explain the solving of a problem? What
was the conflict? How was it solved?
- Is the information present in a logical, well organized
manner? Could the organization of the writing be improved?
Basically, you are actively making a connection between the
ideas in a passage and what has happened to you or someone
you know or something you know about, saying, "I recognize
that action, thought, lesson, situation, feeling!" You
are extending the author's ideas from the article to a bigger
picture - human behavior and life.
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If you have time, you might skim over the examples for
lessons where you might have questions.
Skim the Rubrics section of this course to review tips
on answering multiple choice, short answer, and extended response
questions.
Be sure you are comfortable with the criteria for scoring
and evaluating short answer questions because scoring your
writing will be part of your responsibility.
When you are all warmed up and have about an 90 minutes, go
ahead and demonstrate your effective reader's skills!
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