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Game Play Open 2 nd Slide, let the sound play. Click to 3 rd Slide, let the sound play. Click to 4 th Slide and show students the Game Board As you play the game, click on the YELLOW DOLLAR AMOUNT that the contestant calls, not the surrounding box. When the student answers, click anywhere on the screen to see the correct answer. Keep track of which questions have already been picked by printing out the game board screen (Slide 4) and checking off as you go. Click on the “House / Home Icon” box to return to the main scoreboard. Final Jeopardy – Go to Slide 3 and click “Final Jeopardy” button in the bottom right corner, click again for the Question, click again for final jeopardy sound, When that is finished playing click again for the answer slide.
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200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 Final 100 ???
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200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 Informational Elements 1 Informational Elements 2 Text Structure Standard 6Standard 7
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Tools that help read nonfiction (bold print, captions, diagrams)
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Text Features
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Facts and opinions used by the author to prove a point
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Reasons and Evidence
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A type of text read for the purpose of learning more about a subject or understanding how to complete a task.
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Technical Text
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A type of text that is read for the purpose of gaining knowledge in a particular area of science.
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Scientific Text
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A type of text that is read to gain knowledge of a particular era, and how it shaped the future.
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Historical Text
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A sentence that tells the reader what the paragraph or story is about
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Main Idea or Central Idea
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Important facts or opinions to support the main idea
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Key Details
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DAILY DOUBLE
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Use your own words to briefly explain something
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Summarize
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Words that come before or after a specific word or passage that give it meaning
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Context Clues
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The main subject or a piece of text
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Topic
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Authors organize information by why something happened and what happened.
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Cause and Effect
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Authors put things in order as to how they happened in time
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Chronology
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Authors organize information in a question or situation that needs to be solved and a way of solving it.
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Problem Solution
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Authors describe something by listing its features, characteristics, or examples.
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Description
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Authors show how two or more things are alike and/or how they are different
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Compare and Contrast
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To personally experience or see something yourself; primary source
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Firsthand Account
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To hear or learn about an event through someone else or a different source other than yourself
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Secondhand Account
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The way an event or thing is viewed
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Perspective
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A particular account of a matter
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Versions
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Information used to write a report or speech on a certain topic
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Multiple Sources
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A way to gather and organize information or data
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Chart
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A way to gather and organize information or data
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Graph
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A drawing that shows the parts of something
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Diagram
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To put things in order as to how they happened in time
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Time Line
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Pictures or other visual representations within a text
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Illustrations
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Acronyms used to compare nonfiction paired passages
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TAMDA
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