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Introduction to External Text Structures
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External Text Structure
The way the editor or publisher has arranged and printed the piece of writing. Knowing about external text structure helps you to understand what you are reading.
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Why do we use external text structures?
1. Clarify Material 2. Give Extra Information 3. Show Detail 4. Emphasize Important Information 5. Make Information Easier to Understand
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Types of External Text Structure
Italics Bold Sidebars Heading Subheading Illustrations Graphs Photographs Captions
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Italics Italics are slanted font and used to make a word stand out
Indian as a term Europeans of the 1400s used the term Indies to refer to India, China, Japan and other Asian lands.
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Italics 1) Why would you put words in italics?
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Bold Bold words informs the reader of important key words/vocabulary
Example: Some parents encouraged their children to assimilate, which means to be absorbed into.
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Bold 2) Why would you put words in bold?
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Sidebar Sidebars are boxes of information that give extra information about a topic.
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Sidebar Example:
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Sidebar 3) Why do you think we have sidebars?
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Heading Usually at the top of the page and explains the central topic or theme. Used to clarify or divide the text under a title or heading Subheading
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Heading Subheading
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Illustrations & Graphs
An illustration is a drawing to better explain the text. A graph is a visual representation of data or numbers.
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Illustration Example:
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Graph Example:
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Illustration and Graph
4) Why do we have illustrations and graphs?
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Photographs & Captions
A photograph is a real-life picture representing information from the text A caption is the writing under a photograph and tells you the details of the picture
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Photograph & Caption Example: Photograph Caption
Supporters of Republican presidential hopefuls hold signs outside a polling station at Webster School, in Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 10. Caption
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Can you find any external text structures?
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