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Published byToby Leonard Modified over 9 years ago
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The Three Basic Types…What are they and how can good readers tell the difference?
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Check reader understanding Allow readers to think about what they have read Give readers the opportunity to make connections with their reading
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LITERAL INFERENTIAL CRITICAL
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Usually the easiest to answer. Information can be found right in the reading. Questions can be answered using language word-for-word from the reading. EX: How old was EdNah when she came to Crown Point? “I was seven-nearly eight-years old.” (pg 5)
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More difficult than literal reading comprehension questions. The information cannot be found word-for- word in one place. The reader takes two or more pieces of information, puts them together, and reads between the lines to come to a conclusion. Ex: Did the children have much parental guidance during the summer? No, because they were always doing troublesome things and getting into mischief.
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Usually the most difficult to answer. Many critical reading comprehension questions ask the reader to make a personal judgment or decision, analyze character behavior, or re- imagine events from another perspective. Answers cannot be found in the reading. Critical reading comprehension questions require readers to think BEYOND the text. Ex: How would EdNah’s life at Crown Point have been different if Naneh and Little Fat did not befriend her?
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Choose one of the chapters that we have already read and compose one of each type of question for it. Literal: Inferential: Critical:
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