How to Make an Inference Presentation by IMKessel Lesson by Kelly Roell, Test Prep Guide Kelly Roell.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king.
Advertisements

AHSGE Reading Objective II-5 Recognize Summary Statements.
Recognizing Question Stems So you’ve read the text… now what?
Reading Strategy: Making Inferences Readers need to find the meaning behind the words.
Passage Based Reading for the Sat
The Scarlet Ibis by James Hurst
TEST-TAKING STRATEGIES FOR THE OHIO ACHIEVEMENT READING ASSESSMENT
C LUE W ORDS FOR T EST Q UESTIONS. C LUE W ORDS When taking a test, look for specific clue words to that you know exactly what the question is asking.
Read the prompt below and respond in your spiral notebook. Foreshadowing Read the prompt below and respond in your spiral notebook. Foreshadowing is the.
TAKS ACADEMY Inference Lesson One. What are some things you can infer in this picture?
Citing Evidence to Support Inferences
Citing Evidence to Make Inferences
Reading MAIN IDEA Reading Basics Making Inferences Relating Ideas
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
ACT Reading.
SAT Prep: Improving Paragraphs AVID III Spring 2012.
ACT: The Reading Test.
SAT Prep- Reading Comprehension Strategies- Short Passages
Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions
Read Aloud Anna Meyer: A Wartime Chance to Play Ball Activate Prior Knowledge This is a nonfiction selection about a woman who played professional baseball.
“The Most Dangerous Game” Before, During, and After Reading Skills
TOEFL Course: Week 2 Machala Pasaje Arenillas Santa Rosa Logic and Inference.
Exploring Narrator’s Point of View. What do you think you are seeing? In your writer’s notebook, write a few sentences about what you think you may be.
ACT Prep ACT Reading Test Copyright 2000 mjt Credited to: Kristine Fisher.
Reading Test Review Review each reading skill and strategy. Click on links to practice each skill and strategy.
Strategies for Success with Reading Exams
Learning to Make an Inference Thinking between the lines.
Learning Objective : Today we will make draw conclusions using evidence from text and prior knowledge. We will support it with evidence from the text or.
Writing a short essay … and getting an “A”!
Maniac Magee Literary Elements.
TAKS OER Crossover Question. OER Notes OERs are Open Ended Response questions. There are three OER questions on the TAKS: Narrative – asks a question.
ACT Reading Cano. The reading section of the ACT test measures your ability to read and understand the kind of material required in college coursework.
 Type of Questions on the PLAN/ACT Reading Test.
The Reading Test.  Knowing the variety and the amount of reading that awaits you in college, the ACT has included a reading test.  It’s all about your.
Review for Final Summer II Objectives Covered: Objective 1: vocabulary Objective 2 : main idea and details Objective 3: author’s purpose Objective.
Strategies for Taking Tests Pace Yourself Don’t spend too much time on any one question. Do your best and then move on. Answers the easiest questions.
Notice and Note Signposts for Close Reading The Aim of these Six Brief Lessons: To Empower you to recognize signposts in texts, and then ask the questions.
Prepared by: A. T. M. Monawer Success in EPT Listening & Speaking Reading Writing Listening &Speaking Reading Writing.
READ LIKE A READER Thinking About How You Read – Reading Strategies.
UNIT THREE READING SKILLS NARROW INFERENCES AND WRITER’S VIEW & PURPOSE.
Reading Comprehension Guidelines for Short-answer Questions.
Six-Way Paragraphs Understanding What You Read. Six-Way Paragraphs use six types of questions to help you strengthen the basic skills necessary for reading.
The Wife of Bath’s Tale The Cure to all Love’s Ills.
ACT Reading Test The ACT Reading test is 40 questions long. There are four passages of ten questions. 52 seconds a question 8 minutes a passage 35 minutes.
Ms. Thomas British Literature The Essay Roadmap. Get a plan! Before writing an essay, you need to plan it out. This is called PREWRITING!
Unit Two: Making inferences Support inferences with clues from the text and prior knowledge SAVE this file to your desktop or personal folder before using.
Making an Inference What does this mean? Read something Add what you know to the reading Draw a conclusion.
ANDY- THE ANDROID Let’s listen to the story and try to get the main idea.
COMPREHENSION SKILLS. MAIN IDEA The main idea is the most important idea of the passage as a whole. It is what the passage or story is mostly about.
Introduction How to write introduction Effectively.
3/13/13 Not another OAA!.  Look for key terms in the questions. Words such as identify, describe, used, suggest, change, learn, create and feel will.
“The Most Dangerous Game” By Richard Connell Before, During, and After Reading Skills.
Mrs. Paloti SAT Prep  They are designed to test a student’s ability to comprehend the passage they read and are not intended to test for knowledge,
Responding to Literature Houghton Mifflin Grade 3 D. Crisler 2012/2013.
-what you should include for the different questions. Section A- there is NO choice of question in this section- it will focus on either Vietnam or the.
ACT READING TEST STRATEGIES. QUESTION TYPES DETAILS INFERENCES GENERALIZATIONS WRITER’S VIEW VOCABULARY-IN-CONTEXT.
ALL ABOUT THE ACT: READING TEST
READING 35 Minutes; 40 Questions; 4 Passages
Identifying Question Stems
"Developing reading skills: essential reading comprehension skills, reading for the main idea, determining meaning from the context, tips for vocabulary.
Chapter 5: Making Inferences
WHAT IS READING COMPREHENSION?
Responses to Literature 7ELAB
15 questions: 14 multiple choice (half cold read) 1 paragraph
Facts Today, one-third of American children are being raised by single mothers. According to the White House, full-time working women earn 77% of what.
TEST TAKING STRATEGIES: Reading Strategies
Reading Strategies and Techniques
Presentation transcript:

How to Make an Inference Presentation by IMKessel Lesson by Kelly Roell, Test Prep Guide Kelly Roell

Step 1: Identify an Inference Question First, you'll need to determine whether or not you're actually being asked to make an inference on a reading test. The most obvious questions will have the words "suggest," "imply" or "infer" right in the tag like these: "According to the passage, we can reasonably infer..." "Based on the passage, it could be suggested that..." "Which of the following statements is best supported by the passage?" "The passage suggests that this primary problem..." "The author seems to imply that…" t likely use to add additional support to paragraph three?"

Step 1: Identify an Inference Question Some questions, however, will not come right out and ask you to infer. You'll have to actually infer that you need to make an inference about the passage. Sneaky, huh? Here are a few that require inferencing skills, but don't use those words exactly. "With which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?" "Which of the following sentences would the author most likely use to add additional support to paragraph three?"

Step 2: Trust the Passage Now that you're certain you have an inference question on your hands, and you know exactly what an inference is, you'll need to let go of your prejudices and prior knowledge and use the passage to prove that the inference you select is the correct one. Inferences on a multiple-choice exam are different from those in real life. Out in the real world, if you make an educated guess, your inference could still be incorrect. But on a multiple-choice exam, your inference will be correct because you'll use the details in the passage to prove it. You have to trust that the passage offers you the truth in the setting of the test, and that one of the answer choices provided is correct without stepping too far outside the realm of the passage.

Step 3: Hunt for Clues Your third step is to start hunting for clues – supporting details, vocabulary, character's actions, descriptions, dialogue, and more – to prove one of the inferences listed below the question. Take this question, for example:

Step 3: Hunt for Clues Based on the information in the passage, it could be suggested that the narrator believes Elsa's prior marriages to be: A. uncomfortable, but well-suited to Elsa B. satisfactory and dull to Elsa C. cold and damaging to Elsa D. awful, but worth it to Elsa

Step 3: Hunt for Clues The widow Elsa was as complete a contrast to her third bridegroom, in everything but age, as can be conceived. Compelled to relinquish her first marriage after her husband died in the war, she married a man twice her years to whom she became an exemplary wife despite their having nothing in common, and by whose death she was left in possession of a splendid fortune, though she gave it away to the church. Next, a southern gentleman, considerably younger than herself, succeeded to her hand, and carried her to Charleston, where, after many uncomfortable years, she found herself again a widow. It would have been remarkable if any feeling had survived through such a life as Elsa's; it could not but be crushed and killed by the early disappointment of her first groom's demise, the icy duty of her second marriage, and the unkindness of her third husband, which had inevitably driven her to connect the idea of his death with that of her comfort.

Step 3: Hunt for Clues To find clues that point to the correct answer, look for descriptions that would support those first adjectives in the answer choices. Here are some of the descriptions of her marriages in the passage: "…she became an exemplary wife despite their having nothing in common…" "…after many uncomfortable years, she found herself again a widow." "…the icy duty of her second marriage and the unkindness of her third husband which had inevitably driven her to connect the idea of his death with that of her comfort."

Step 4: Narrow Down the Choices The last step to making a correct inference on a multiple-choice test is to narrow down the answer choices. Using the clues from the passage, we can infer that nothing much was "satisfactory" to Elsa about her marriages, which gets rid of Choice B. Choice A is also incorrect, because although the marriages certainly seem uncomfortable based on the clues, they were not well-suited to her as she had nothing in common with her second husband and wanted her third husband to die. Choice D is also incorrect, because nothing is stated or implied in the passage to prove that Elsa believed her marriages to be worth it in some way; in fact, we can infer that it wasn't worth it to her at all because she gave away the money from her second husband. So, we have to believe that Choice C is the best – the marriages were cold and damaging. The passage states explicitly that her marriage was an "icy duty" and her third husband was "unkind." We also know that they were damaging because her feelings had been "crushed and killed" by her marriages.

Step 5: Practice. Practice. Practice. By yourself, strengthen your inferencing skills; complete the worksheet from your teacher. With your partner, check your inferencing skills; see on which answer you agree. If you disagree, find out why.