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Published byAdelia Hudson Modified over 8 years ago
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Reading Strategies Are used by a READER to understand the text
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Visualize Picture in your mind
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Predict Guess what will happen next
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Connect Relate to your life, outside world, or other literature
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Question Who, What, When, Where, Why, How?
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Infer Assume based on evidence
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Literary Terms Are used by a WRITER to help the reader, or to improve their writing
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Plot Sequence of events in a story exposition Rising action climax Falling action Resolution/ denouement Exposition: provides some background and informs the readers about the plot, character, setting, and theme of the essay/story. Denouement: The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot.
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Theme The message of a story It should be expressed as a complete sentence. It may be about life, society, or human nature Themes often explore timeless, or universal ideas It may be implied rather than explicitly stated.
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Example of theme: Violence only begets more violence
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Note about Theme vs. Motif A motif is different from a theme A MOTIF is a recurring important idea or image. Unlike theme, it can be expressed as a single word or fragmentary phrase An example of motif in The Glass Castle would be fire.
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Setting The time and place of a story
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Point of View Who is telling the story? ◦ 1 st Person: character in the story, “I” ◦ 3 rd Person Limited: not a character, “he, she” ◦ 3 rd Person Omniscient: outside narrator, knows all
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Conflict A problem between two forces Conflict can be internal or external: ◦ Internal: Person vs. Self ◦ External: Person vs. Person, Person vs. Nature, Person vs. Society
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Characterization The way the author develops a character ◦ a) Direct: author tells the info ◦ b) Indirect: author hints, we infer ◦ a)Static: character stays the same ◦ b)Dynamic: character changes
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Symbol Object that represents an idea A symbol must be something tangible or visible, while the idea it symbolizes must be something abstract or universal. (In other words, a symbol must be something you can hold in your hand or draw a picture of, while the idea it symbolizes must be something you can’t hold in your hand or draw a picture of.) Example : The american flag
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Foreshadowing Hints at what’s to come
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Mood Emotion (the audience’s) created by a work It refers to the general sense of feeling the READER is supposed to get from the text. Mood is a literary element not a technique. You would not say “The author uses mood,” you would instead say “The mood is…”
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Example of Mood The mood of Macbeth is dark, murky and mysterious
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Tone The speaker’s attitude toward a subject It refers only to what the character is thinking/feeling, not the author Example of Tone: The poem has a bitter tone
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Imagery Writing that appeals to the senses
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Irony Opposite of what is expected There are three types of Irony: dramatic, situational, and verbal ◦ Dramatic: the audience knows more than the characters ◦ Situational: Opposite of what is expected to happen happens ◦ Verbal: Saying the opposite of meaning, sarcasm
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Difference between Reading Strategies and Literary Terms: Reading Strategies Reader Literary Terms Writer
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How do they connect? Writer Uses Helps us/ Reader to: ImageryVisualize ForeshadowingPredict ToneInfer, Question, Predict Indirect CharacterInfer, Question Direct CharacterConnect, Question ThemeQuestion, Connect SymbolConnect, Infer ConflictQuestion MoodConnect IronyQuestion SettingQuestion, Connect P.O.V.Question, Connect
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