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Question- While you read, question what's happening. Searching for reasons behind events and characters' actions can help you get more involved in what you read.
Connect- Connect personally with what you're reading. Think of similarities between the descriptions in the selection and what you have personally experienced, heard, or read.
Predict- Try to figure out what will happen next and how the selection might end. Then read on to see if you made good guesses.
Clarify- Stop occasionally to review what you understand so far, and expect to have your understanding change and develop as you read on.
Evaluate- Form opinions about what you read, both while you're reading and after you've finished. Make judgments about the characters and develop your own ideas about events.
Visualize- Make a picture in your mind of what the text says. Imagine you are looking at what is describe.
Plot- the series of incidents or happenings in a story. The plot is the outline or arrangement of events.
Setting- the time and place of the action in a story; where and when the action takes place.
Mood- the feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates. For example, the mood of a story might be joyous or suspenseful.
Theme- the main idea of a story.
Style- the way in which a writer uses language. The choice and arrangement of words and sentences help to create the author’s style.
Purpose- the reason the author wrote the story. For example, an author’s purpose might be to amuse or entertain, to convince, or to inform.
Characterization- the ways a writer shows what a character is like. The way a character acts, speaks, thinks and looks characterizes that person.
1 comment:
Hi mr. joachim! I succesfully installed acrobatic reader onto my computer by simply downloading the latest version from limewhire. Hopefully my computer will print and i can hand that spelling worksheet in.(probably not tommorow because it took me forever to find an actual setup.exe file that would exract all acrobatic reader files to my computer, also i had lots n lots of math i didnt finish! Don't worry though because i got today's social studies assingment finished in P.E since i have a week left on my doctor's note)
By the way, is there a program which would alow me to crack a wireless router's WEP key? The neighbors got high speed and were foolish enough to install a wireless router with only a ten character WEP key protecting them. Too bad im next door to them!!! I almost acomplished this but the dirty deed required a specific usb wireless adapter (airPcap). Im sure I could come accross one in some place on division, but before i did that, I wanted to know what you thought.
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