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Drawing Inferences. Read Between the Lines Not all information is clearly stated. Some information is implied and must be inferred by the reader.

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Presentation on theme: "Drawing Inferences. Read Between the Lines Not all information is clearly stated. Some information is implied and must be inferred by the reader."— Presentation transcript:

1 Drawing Inferences

2 Read Between the Lines Not all information is clearly stated. Some information is implied and must be inferred by the reader.

3 Sources of Inferences You can sometimes draw an inference by observing something or someone. You can draw inferences when having a conversation with someone, either by the way the person said something or what was left unsaid. In reading, inferences can be drawn by analyzing the actions of the characters.

4 Inferences vs. Facts Inferences must be drawn from the facts that are provided to be accurate. However, you can underline a fact in a book, but you can only feel an inference.

5 Higher-Order Skills The ability to draw inferences is one of the higher-order reading skills.

6 Source Hancock, Ophelia. Reading Skills for College Students. 7 th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2007.


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