
Annotating using Questions
Presentation
•
English
•
6th - 8th Grade
•
Medium
+16
Standards-aligned
Donna Herrera
Used 29+ times
FREE Resource
5 Slides • 10 Questions
1
Annotating using Questions
by Donna Herrera
2
3
Why annotate?
You need to annotate to remember what you have read
You need to annotate to have evidence to prove your answer
You need to annotate to show you understand what you are reading
4
There are different ways to annotate, but we are concentrating on one today...
5
Using the Questions to Annotate
One method of note-taking is using the questions to guide the highlighting process...
1. Read the first question before reading the passage
2. While reading the passage, search for the answer
3. When you find the answer, highlight the text evidence
4. Answer the question
5. Read the next question
6. Continue reading
7. Follow the steps from 1-4 again
6
Multiple Choice
Annotating is a type of
Note taking strategy
Multiple choice test
Writing activity
None of the above
7
Multiple Choice
The purpose of annotating is to...
make an assumption about what is being read
make us do more work than we should be doing in English
highlight the text word for word
allow you to interact with, understand, and think about what the text is saying
8
Multiple Choice
What should you do when you find a word you don't know?
Ignore it
Guess what it means and move on
Define it using a dictionary or context clues
Write a catchy song about it
9
Multiple Choice
What's a way that you can get more out of annotating?
Don't highlight or underline everything
Talk to a friend or neighbor
Reread the story or article
All of the above
10
Multiple Choice
Textual Evidence is
the general character or attitude of a piece of writing
the strategies used to determine whether or not written information is correct
the atmosphere created by the writer
added notes or information to the text
11
Multiple Choice
12
Multiple Choice
13
Multiple Choice
14
Multiple Choice
15
Multiple Choice
An inference is...
Text evidence + what you know
Retelling a text
Making a guess without evidence
Information written directly into the text.
Annotating using Questions
by Donna Herrera
Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 15
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
9 questions
Annotation: 7th Grade ELA
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
10 questions
Avoiding Double Negatives
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
11 questions
Symbolism
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
11 questions
Summarizing vs. Paraphrasing
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
12 questions
Character Interaction
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
11 questions
MLA In-Text CItations
Presentation
•
7th - 8th Grade
14 questions
4.1 reading comprehension
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
14 questions
Affixes
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
10 questions
5.P.1.3 Distance/Time Graphs
Quiz
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Fire Drill
Quiz
•
2nd - 5th Grade
20 questions
Equivalent Fractions
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
22 questions
School Wide Vocab Group 1 Master
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Inferences
Quiz
•
4th Grade
12 questions
What makes Nebraska's government unique?
Quiz
•
4th - 5th Grade
Discover more resources for English
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language Review
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Revising & Editing practice
Quiz
•
7th Grade
20 questions
Revising and Editing Station
Quiz
•
6th Grade
18 questions
Informative or Argumentative essay
Quiz
•
5th Grade - University
24 questions
7th grade STAAR Reading Review
Quiz
•
7th Grade
50 questions
ELAR Review / STAAR practice
Quiz
•
4th - 6th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues Practice
Quiz
•
7th Grade