Thor Gibbins Montgomery College, Silver Spring/Takoma Park.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Thor Gibbins Montgomery College, Silver Spring/Takoma Park.
Advertisements

How to Write an Annotated Bibliography
Prediction:: About convincing CSU Professor, Pomona Purpose: inform, explain Audience: Students Establishing credibility, name dropping Heading=definition.
SQ3R: A Reading Technique
Tuesday, November 6 th Topic: Summary Writing: Up Close and Personal Level: Analysis, Synthesis Agenda: Quick Write C-Notes: Summary Writing Row Scrimmage.
BELLRINGERS EXPOSITORY REVIEW. MONDAY, OCTOBER 15 Expository Writing Recap 1.What are the two types of expository writing? 2.What types of organizational.
Summary Paraphrase Quotation. Summary  Condensed  In your own words  Concise, but not telegraphic.
Compare and Contrast format. Introduction Opening Statement: interesting fact, interesting statement about topic, an important quotation....attention.
ENG. 9 UNIT 6: READING NON-FICTION
Rooks, Parts of the paragraph Objective: Enable students to write a complete outline of paragraph and a complete paragraph with the correct grammar.
Rooks, Review  Objective : Students are able to explain cause and effect analysis paragraphs and comparison and contrast paragraph. Students.
CHAPTER ONE Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. Becoming a Master Reader PowerPoint by Mary Dubbé Thomas Nelson Community College PART ONE A Reading.
 A. Topic Sentence: a statement of the paragraph’s main idea.  The remaining sentences support, explain or illustrate the topic sentence B. Implied.
Critical Thinking: Close Reading of Texts Presented by Dr. Cheryl Torok Fleming November, 2013 Based on Paul, R. & Elder, L. (2006). Critical Thinking:
The Main Idea Stated or Implied.
Chapter 1: Active Reading & Thinking Strategies
Super QAR for Test-wise Students. Why the World Needs Super QAR...
Invention and Arrangement
Easy-to-Understand Tables RIT Standards Key Ideas and Details #1 KindergartenGrade 1Grade 2 With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about.
Week 6 RDG 081.
Super QAR for Test-wise Students. In the Book Right There: A “detail” type of question, where words used to form the question and words that answer the.
© 2003 Pearson Education, Inc., Publishing as Longman Publishers Guide to College Reading, 6/e Kathleen T. McWhorter Chapter 5 Reading As Thinking PowerPoint.
PSAE: ACT Reading Test The Tests & How We Prepare NOTE: This presentation was adapted by A. Theodore & M. Streit (CLS) from a D155 prepared Power Point.
Locating Main Ideas and Supporting Details Resource: 20Main%20Ideas%20and%20%20Sup porting%20Details.htm.
2008 Pearson Education, Inc., Publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 6: Organizing Textbook Information Bridging the Gap, 9/e Brenda Smith.
Building Critical Thinking and Academic Writing Skills Assignment 4: Synthesis/Analysis Paper.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers The Master Reader Updated Edition by D. J. Henry Chapter 1 A Reading System for.
Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)
Three Part Essay Structure How to write a collegiate five- paragraph essay.
Everyday Text Reading Strategies. What is Everyday Text? Everyday text is reading you encounter every day. It includes a variety of materials such as.
An Organized Approach to Reading a Healthcare Textbook Make your textbook your tool!
QAR Question Answer Relationship. Objective~ Knowing the type of question being asked will help you to figure out the answer. Knowing the type of question.
TYPE OF READINGS.
Chapter 4: From Paragraph to Essay
Test Reflection Chapter 3 - Decimals. Paragraph 1 What did you do to prepare for the test? Did you study? How much?
The IB History Test What does Paper 1 look like?.
An Organized Approach to Reading a Healthcare Textbook Make your textbook work for you!
DAY 8 FEB. 17 Reading 091. SQ5R Study Method A good overview (also see handout):  Survey  Question 
English 101-A.  Be able to name the 6 steps to the writing process.  Be prepared for True/False questions on the 6 steps of the writing process.
Topic Sentence States the argument and relates to the claim/thesis Clearly states the main idea of the paragraph Appears at the beginning of the paragraph.
CHAPTER ONE Becoming an Effective Reader PowerPoint by Mary Dubbé Thomas Nelson Community College Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. PART ONE A Reading.
Writing Lesson Building UNIFIED Body Paragraphs. Body Paragraphs - Unity Body paragraphs must be UNIFIED  All of the sentences must relate to a single.
Summary of Writing Essay. Purpose: To summarize a piece of writing. To summarize a piece of writing. To share the main idea and underlying details of.
Opening Doors: Chapter 5 Formulating Implied Main Ideas.
Slang and Language Change UNIT 1. Unit Objectives  Practice effective listening and note-taking strategies;  Prepare to listen to the lecture about.
The Paragraph. Parts of a Paragraph 1.One Main Idea 2.Topic sentence 3.Indent; spelling and punctuation sentences 5.Closing sentence.
Reading, Invention and Arrangement
Explicating Literature
CHAPTER I INTELLIGENCE
Writing an Argumentative Essay
Understanding Main Idea
Chapter 1: Active Reading & Thinking Strategies
ESSAY REVIEW AW5.
Chapter 6: Organizing Textbook Information
Introduction to The Call of the Wild
The Topic Sentence.
Chapter 6: Organizing Textbook Information
World War II and The Holocaust
Expository writing gives , explains a or , or tells how a happens.
Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting
The Main Idea Stated or Implied.
March 6, 2018 –Take out Pro/Con
Informational Reports
How To Answer Questions Well
Written responses How to accurately respond to written response prompts after reading a single passage or paired texts.
Active and Passive Readers
Warm – up Notebooks! Have your Homework out!
WRITE BITES Early College Campus.
Headings How has the information been divided into smaller topics?
Headings How has the information been divided into smaller topics?
Presentation transcript:

Thor Gibbins Montgomery College, Silver Spring/Takoma Park

 Lecture: Paragraph types with no topic sentences  New Article Robot be Good  Reading Activity-Combining Roles

If there isn’t a topic sentence, it is up to you, the reader, to infer the main idea  Just The Facts ( RFR p. 239)  Question & Answer ( RFR p. 240)  Competing Points of View ( RFR p. 241)  Comparison & Contrast ( RFR p. 242)  Results of Research ( RFR p. 243 )

 Let’s Scan (or Survey the Article)  Do we have background knowledge on the subject?  What questions do the Authors want us to be able to answer after reading?  Now let’s read and prepare for Friday’s discussion…except you will perform all the roles of discussion: Question, Clarify, Summarize, Connect, and offer a “So What?”

 Homework:  Read RFR Chapter 5 pages  Do exercises 5 & 6  Begin Reading (SQ3R) Robot be Good ; identify topic sentences if any and paraphrase main ideas of paragraphs