Main Idea and Details Chapters 1, 2, and 3 Chapters 2, 3, and 4

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

T EN S TEPS TO A DVANCED R EADING John Langan © 2009 Townsend Press.
T EN S TEPS TO A DVANCED R EADING John Langan © 2009 Townsend Press.
Fry’s Third 100 Phrases Read each phrase out loud in a soft voice.
High-Frequency Phrases
A.
Putting It All Together (Part 2)
High-Frequency Phrases
Main Idea and Supporting Details
THEA Reading Objective 2
Main Idea and Supporting Details
© 2008 Townsend Press Fourth Edition John Langan Fourth Edition John Langan T EN S TEPS TO B UILDING C OLLEGE R EADING S KILLS.
The main idea (or point) is that the man is a terrible pet owner. The main idea is vividly supported by the dog’s three specific reasons. Main idea 1.
Finding the Main Idea. Objective --Main ideas We will learn and understand that authors include supporting details to strengthen and support the main.
First Grade Bedrock Word List
 Write a little each day. Practicing regularly helps you become more observant and confident.  Try to write at the same time every day. When writing.
2. Instead of 1. have difficulty / trouble / a hard time + V-ing.
Chapter 5: Topics, Main Ideas, and Topic Sentences
SAT Prep: Improving Paragraphs AVID III Spring 2012.
Main Idea Textbook Review
Main Idea Why is it important? Main ideas help readers remember important information.
The main idea (or point) is that the man is a terrible pet owner. The main idea is vividly supported by the dog’s three specific reasons. Main idea 1.
Five Love Languages. Encouraging Words What are Words of Affirmation? To a person who speaks this love language, words of appreciation and honest compliments.
Specially invited guests, teachers, parents, graduates and well wishers. I am very honored to be here today. As I thought about what I would say this afternoon,
Main Idea and Supporting Details
Created by Verna C. Rentsch and Joyce Cooling Nelson School
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
Main Idea and Supporting Details. What is a Main Idea? A Main Idea is : A general statement about the WHOLE passage that contains the TOPIC.
Main Idea and Supporting Details. What is a Main Idea? A Main Idea is : A general statement about the WHOLE passage that contains the TOPIC.
P3 Sight Words. You will have four seconds to read each word. After that time, the slide will change to show the next word. Pay close attention so that.
Power Point Sight Words
Main Idea and Supporting Details
 Starting and stopping your paper.  Introduction: To make your audience want to read your paper indicated the subject of the paper o Give a road map.
By Issac Bashevis Singer
Main Idea and Supporting Details. What is a Main Idea? A Main Idea is : A general statement about the WHOLE passage that contains the TOPIC.
Dr Nazmi Abdel-Salam Al-Masri Sept 2013 IUG Unit (1) Introduction to Academic Reading.
Jamestown Timed Reading Plus
OBJECTIVES 1. Tips to read 2. Practice 3. Song 4. Quiz for Friday (simple present and continuous and reading OBJECTIVES 1. Tips to read 2. Practice 3.
What do you need to live comfortably? The list probably includes food, a home, clothes, and water. Other needs might include love, an education, friends,
Higher English Close Reading Types of Questions Understanding Questions Tuesday 8 OctoberCMCM1.
Listen and Decode Listen and Respond Listen and Read Listen and Match Listen and Conclude Listen and Complete Listen and Judge Being All Ears.
Grade Two Sight Word Lists Southington Public Schools.
Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
Main Idea and Supporting Details. What is a Main Idea? A Main Idea is : A general statement about the WHOLE passage that contains the TOPIC. Topic.
Sight Words.
TEN STEPS to BUILDING COLLEGE READING SKILLS Use the tab key, space bar, arrow keys, or page up/down to move through the slides. FIFTH EDITION This presentation.
High Frequency Words.
Main Idea What’s it all about?. Main Idea You are on your way to Language Arts class, and your friend asks you about the movie you saw last night. Your.
Near the car. For example Watch the river. Between the lines.
The Third 100. Directions: Read each phrase. A left mouse click advances the slide show. Time yourself. Try to get faster and make fewer errors. Have.
Frye’s phrases 3 rd 100. Near the car Between the lines.
This text mainly tells us_________. A. How terrible AIDS isA B. How miserable Xiaohua isB C. What we should do towardsC AIDS and AIDS patients D.
First Grade Rainbow Words By Mrs. Saucedo , Maxwell School
These words come from Dr. Edward Fry’s Instant Word List.
Jane was 5 years old. She had a question: “Where does an egg come out of a chicken?” Do you know? Where does a chicken have a hole in it big enough for.
First Grade High Frequency Word List`. a and are.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
THE READING-WRITING CONNECTION
Finding the Main Idea and Supporting Details
Copyright © 2011 Townsend Press. All rights reserved.
Sight Words 1st Grade.
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
TEN STEPS TO ADVANCED READING
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
First Grade High Frequency Words Kinder. review Pre-1st Grade
Presentation transcript:

Main Idea and Details Chapters 1, 2, and 3 Chapters 2, 3, and 4 Reading Objective 2 Main Idea and Details Chapters 1, 2, and 3 Chapters 2, 3, and 4

What is a Main Idea? A Main Idea is : A general statement about the WHOLE passage that contains the TOPIC .

The main idea (or point) is that the man is a terrible pet owner. The main idea is vividly supported by the dog’s three specific reasons. The main idea (or point) is that the man is a terrible pet owner. See page 23 in textbook. POINT: The man is a terrible pet owner.

Here are four strategies that will help you find the main idea. 1 Find the topic first. 2 Look for general versus specific ideas. The general statement will be the main idea. See page 26 in textbook. 3 Use key words to lead you to the main idea. 4 Make sure the main idea is about the WHOLE passage.

1. Find the topic first The topic is the general subject of a selection. It can often be expressed in one or more words. The main idea always contains the topic. See page 29 in textbook.

Who or what is the selection about? Many times, the topic will be the heading of the passage. But there are many times when you are not given topics—with individual paragraphs in articles or textbooks for example. To find the topic of a selection when the topic is not given, ask this simple question: See page 29 in textbook. Who or what is the selection about?

Gossip What is the paragraph about? Social psychologists have found that almost everyone gossips. Male or female, young or old, blue-collar or professional, humans love to talk about one another. All too often, such gossip is viewed as a frivolous waste of time. What is the paragraph about? See page 30 in textbook. Gossip

Here are four strategies that will help you find the main idea. 1 Find the topic first. 2 Look for general versus specific ideas. The general statement will be the main idea. See page 26 in textbook. 3 Use key words to lead you to the main idea. 4 Make sure the main idea is about the WHOLE passage.

2. General vs Specific Main ideas are general. Supporting details are specific

Specific General

Specific General

Specific General

Attending college can help you make friends. A college degree will help you get a higher paying job. College has many beneficial outcomes. A college degree helps you earn respect. College will improve the way you think.

Here are four strategies that will help you find the main idea. 1 Find the topic first. 2 Look for general versus specific ideas. The general statement will be the main idea. See page 26 in textbook. 3 Use key words to lead you to the main idea. 4 Make sure the main idea is about the WHOLE passage.

3. Use key words to help you find the main idea. First to note are list words, which tell you a list of items is to follow. The main idea in the paragraph about gossip was stated like this: However, it actually serves several important functions in the human community. See page 34 in textbook. The expression several important functions helps you zero in on your target: the main idea.

List Words Many other list-word expressions are possible—“four kinds of,” “some advantages of, ” “three reasons for,” and so on. If you see a sentence with a word group like the ones above, you’ve probably found the main idea. See page 34 in textbook.

Here are some common word groups that often announce a main idea: List Words See page 34 in textbook. Note that each of them contains a word that ends in s—a plural that suggests the supporting details will be a list of items.

What are the list words in each of the sentences below? 1. Researchers have identified two factors that play a significant role in our dreams. 2. Several steps can help you overcome the fear of speaking and become an effective speaker. See page 35 in textbook. 3. Three key differences exist between the House and the Senate. Each of these phrases tells you that a list of details will follow.

Addition words are generally used right before a supporting detail. In addition to list words, addition words can alert you to the main idea. Addition words are generally used right before a supporting detail. Here is a list of words that often introduce major supporting details and help you discover the main idea: Addition Words See page 35 in textbook. When you see this type of clue, you can assume that the detail it introduces fits under the umbrella of a main idea.

Here are four strategies that will help you find the main idea. 1 Find the topic first. 2 Look for general versus specific ideas. The general statement will be the main idea. See page 26 in textbook. 3 Use key words to lead you to the main idea. 4 Make sure the main idea is about the WHOLE passage.

Which sentence contains the main idea? As you read the paragraph below, look for the main idea. 4. Make sure the main idea is about the WHOLE passage Today, most people in the Western world use a fork to eat. But before the eighteenth century, using a fork was highly discouraged. Most people in Europe ate with their hands. People from the upper class used three fingers, while the commoners ate with five. When an inventor from Tuscany created a miniature pitchfork for eating, Europeans thought that it was a strange utensil. Men who used a fork were often ridiculed and considered feminine. Priests called out against the fork, claiming that only human hands were worthy to touch the food God had blessed them with. One wealthy noblewoman shocked clergymen by eating with a fork she designed herself. Over dinner, they accused her of being too excessive. When the woman died from the plague a few days later, the priests claimed her death was a punishment from the heavens. They warned others that using a fork could bring them the same fate. See page 38 in textbook. ANSWER: The second sentence The next slide shows and explains the answer. Which sentence contains the main idea?

Which sentence contains the main idea? As you read the paragraph below, look for the main idea. Each year, as days grow shorter and nights grow colder, animals take action to survive the winter. Many animals fly, swim, or walk hundreds or thousands of miles to the south in search of a warm winter home. Earthworms travel too slowly to make a long journey to warmer regions. But they will die if they get trapped in the frozen ground. To survive a brutal winter, earthworms practice vertical migration. They move from dirt that’s close to the surface to dirt that’s deeper down. Each fall, the same instinct that sends geese flying south causes earthworms to start moving downward. As little barbs that stick out of their bodies poke into the dirt, the earthworms contract their muscles. This moves them downward to a point where they’re below the soil that will freeze in the winter. Only after winter passes and soil overhead warms up to 36 degrees or more do the earthworms tunnel back upward. See page 39 in textbook ANSWER: The fifth sentence (the one beginning with “To survive…”) The next slide shows and explains the answer. Which sentence contains the main idea?

Theory Whataburger Main Idea Topic detail detail detail detail detail A Main Idea is a general statement that incorporates all details. This statement must contain the topic. A main idea without a topic is like a Whataburger with no meat!

Tips and things to remember about main idea Key words that SOMETIMES (not always) let you know a main idea is coming: In conclusion Thus In other words However If the passage is discussing a study, research, survey, or experiment, the main idea will be the results or the outcome of that study The main Idea is NEVER a question.

The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia, has conducted a wide-scale survey in eleven states to determine teenagers’ knowledge about AIDS. Half of the teens surveyed believe a person can get AIDS through giving blood. Almost three-quarters of teenagers think that AIDS can be gotten from a simple blood test. And half believe that the disease can be easily contracted from a public toilet. None of these beliefs is well-founded. According to one survey, many teens have a poor understanding of how people get AIDS. B. The Center for Disease Control conducted a survey to discover teens’ knowledge about AIDS. C. Teenagers have a poor understanding of sexually transmitted diseases.

Before they can say any words, babies communicate by making a variety of sounds. They start by crying. Then they progress to cooing when they are happy, squealing, gurgling, and making long “oohs” and “aahs.” At about six months they babble, repeating syllables such as “buh” and “muh.” Next they start to imitate sounds they hear, even though they don’t seem to understand these sounds. At the next stage, they string such sounds together in a way that is almost speechlike. At about age 1, they say their first meaningful word—usually “mama” or “dada.” Soon they use many words, and at about eighteen months they begin to make combinations of words, forming simple sentences. Babies are able to communicate before they can actually speak. B. Babies coo and babble when they are happy. C. Babies learn to speak in several stages.

According to scientists, cockroaches evolved about 300 million years ago, which means they saw the dinosaurs come and go and later watched people emerge on Earth. If you wonder how such little creatures have lasted so long, consider the fact that they can live in a refrigerator or in extreme heat. They can develop resistance to poisons faster than scientists can develop new ones. And they can live for two months on water alone or go for five months without water. Furthermore, they are quick to escape from danger. The takeoff time for a threatened cockroach has been timed at 54/1000th of a second. Cockroaches evolved about 300 million years ago. Cockroaches can live in a wide variety of temperatures and quickly develop resistance to poisons. C. Cockroaches have survived for millions of years because they can adapt to a wide variety of circumstances and react quickly to danger.

Imagine a beam of light many billions of times more concentrated than the sunlight focused by a magnifying glass. A beam so intense that it will burn a hole in a steel plate, or even through a diamond, the hardest natural material known to man. Such a beam can be produced by a modern source of light called a laser. Laser light is used for communication, for extremely accurate measurements, for surgery and dentistry, and for many different purposes in engineering and science. a.    Laser light can be made from sunlight b.   Laser light can be used for communication, for extremely accurate measurements, for surgery and dentistry, and for many different purposes in engineering and science c.    A laser is an intense form of light that has many valuable uses d.   Laser beams can burn holes through very hard surfaces.

Pesticides kill plants and animals other than the pests they are intended for. Pesticides pollute water systems. Some pests develop immunity to frequently used pesticides. Some pesticides such as DDT and its relatives can remain in the environment for many years beyond the time necessary to do their intended job. Some pesticides have been linked to cancer and other health problems in humans. Some pesticides have been linked to cancer and other health problems Pesticides can be very harmful. Pesticides kill plants and animals other than the pests they are intended for. They can be very dangerous to both people and the environment.