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Patterns of Organization

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Presentation on theme: "Patterns of Organization"— Presentation transcript:

1 Patterns of Organization
Text Structure Patterns of Organization

2 What is Text Structure? How information in a passage is organized
We will study six common patterns: Chronological Cause and Effect Compare and Contrast Problem and Solution Sequence / Process Spatial / Descriptive

3 Chronological Information is organized in order of time. Example
Chrono = time Logic = order Example Jill came tumbling after. Jack and Jill ran up the hill to fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his crown. ALL stories are told chronologically.

4 They performed poorly on the test.
Cause and Effect An action and its results are explained. Cause Effect Students did not learn the material. They performed poorly on the test. Don’t confuse with chronological. Won’t have a beginning, middle, and end. Time won’t progress much.

5 Compare and Contrast Tells how two things are similar and different.
Apples & Oranges Alike Different 1. Both are fruits. 1. People don’t eat orange skins. 2. Both have skin. 2. Oranges have more juice.

6 Property is being spray painted. Require a license to buy spray paint.
Problem and Solution A problem and answer are suggested. Problem Solution Property is being spray painted. Require a license to buy spray paint. Don’t confuse with cause and effect. It is presented as a PROBLEM.

7 Sequence / Process Writing
Information is listed step-by-step. Explains how to do it or how it happens. 4. Flip omelet. Don’t confuse with chronological! 3. Cook on one side. 2. Add cheese. Does not occur at a specific time. 1. Crack a few eggs.

8 Descriptive Writing Racial is to race as spatial is to space.
Describes something in order of space. Describes how something looks. TIME DOESN’T PASS in these passages. My bedroom A television across from the bed. Two windows on the west Wall A bed in the middle. A closet by the TV

9 Tips to Identify Ask, “what is the author doing in this paragraph?” Put it in your own words. Have a hunch? Use the graphic organizer to see if the info fits. Look for signal words.


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