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Happy Friday! 30 November 2018 Find your seat quietly.

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Presentation on theme: "Happy Friday! 30 November 2018 Find your seat quietly."— Presentation transcript:

1 Happy Friday! 30 November 2018 Find your seat quietly.
Check the board for required materials. Have your homework – Tone Worksheet - ready to turn in.

2 What will we learn today?
We will learn how to identify the author’s purpose for writing different texts. We will learn how the author’s point of view affects the text. We will learn that one author’s position can differ from another. Image:

3 Author’s Purpose and Point of View
Turn to a new page in your ELA Notebook. Title this page “Author’s Purpose and Point of View” Be sure to add this to your table of contents.

4 What is Author’s Purpose? The author’s purpose is the
PIE Persuade Inform Entertain Everything you read has a purpose. When authors write books, magazines, newspapers, on-line articles, even commercials, they choose their words for a purpose. The author’s purpose is the reason for writing the text: to persuade, inform, or entertain. Image: fcit.usf.edu/fcat/strategies/i/24055.gif

5 Author’s Purpose to persuade
When the author’s purpose is to persuade, the author wants the reader to side with his or her position. A persuasive text contains facts and the author’s opinion. Image: celebrity read poster With persuasive texts, the author’s position is for or against the issue or topic.

6 Author’s Purpose to inform
If the author’s purpose is to inform, the reader learns something from the text. Informational texts often include:  Facts  Details  Instructions  Descriptions  Explanations Image:

7 Can you identify the author’s purpose?
YES! The correct answer is to inform. Image: The label contains information and instructions on how to use the medicine.

8 Author’s Purpose to entertain
If the author’s purpose is to entertain, an author writes to interest the reader. Not all entertaining texts are funny. Chasing Lincoln’s Killer was written for entertainment, but the story is serious. Image:

9 Can a text have 2 purposes?
YES! Some texts will have two purposes. For example, if an article is about eating healthy, it will try to persuade you to eat your vegetables and inform you about the different types of food groups. Image:

10 Can a text have 2 purposes?
Some texts do have two purposes. For example, if a story tells how a teen learned to deal with moving to a new school, the text would inform and entertain the reader. Image:

11 Can a text have 2 purposes?
Inform? Entertain? Persuade? offers many on-line articles on topics that concern teens. This text persuades the reader to “plan your goal” and informs the reader about how to create a personal action plan.

12 An author’s Point of View
Authors want their readers to see the topic from their point of view, through their eyes, from their outlook. Point of view is the author’s perspective on a topic. Image:

13 An author’s Point of View
Depending on the topic and purpose, writers write in different points of view. An author’s Point of View First Person - (I, we) Examples - autobiographies, memoirs, speeches Second Person - (you, your) Examples – instructions, recipes, advice Third Person - (he, she, it, they) Examples – news articles, encyclopedias

14 Authors’ Positions on Italian Food
When you analyze the author's purpose and point of view, focus on how the author acknowledges and responds to conflicting evidence or viewpoints. Doing so will reveal details about an author’s position. Authors’ Positions on Italian Food One author may write about the many types of pasta and cheeses available in Italian food. This author’s position is that Italian food offers many delicious choices. Another author may write that pasta has too many carbs and cheese includes too many fat calories. This author’s position is that Italian food is fattening.

15 Author’s Purpose Position, and Point of View
Let’s review: (2 minutes individual & 2 minutes collaborative) What is Author’s Purpose? What are the 3 reasons authors write a text? What is Point of View? Image: Possible Activity: This strategy teaches students how to identify the author's purpose or point of view. 1. The teacher introduces the four main purposes an author may use. Give plenty of examples of each type, and practice identifying which ones belong under which heading. 2. The teacher places students into cooperative groups of four. Give each group a copy of the daily newspaper. Have students search through and cut out articles, advertisements, etc., and identify the author's purpose. Follow-up with a class discussion where articles are shared and the justification of an author's purpose is explained. Reference Adapted from Florida Department of Education materials.

16 Analyze Craft and Structure
In your ELA textbook, please turn to page 227. Review the information on author’s purpose and point of view. This should sound familiar! Complete the Practice section by rereading Wiesel’s speech, recording your ideas in the table and answering the questions in your ELA notebook using complete sentences. Have a wonderful weekend!!


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