
Text Structure
Presentation
•
English
•
6th - 8th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Hard
+3
Standards-aligned
Ambur Duron
Used 5+ times
FREE Resource
4 Slides • 5 Questions
1
What is Text Structure?
The 5 Types of Text Structure we will review are:
1. Sequential: describe a process or series of steps in sequential order (first, next, after, then, last)
Chronological: tell about events in chronological order (1901, 1908, 1912)
2. Descriptive: describing words/adjectives
3. Compare and Contrast: compare and contrast information
4. Cause and Effect: present causes and their effects
5. Problem and Solution: describe a problem and offer a solution
An informational text presents readers with information or ideas about real people, places, things, and events. In order to present information clearly, writers use text structures, or organizational patterns, to present information. There are different types of informational text structures.
2
A writer may also use text structure to organize information about multiple topics. In addition, a writer may use more than one organizational pattern within the same text.
Analyzing the structure of an informational text helps the reader understand how facts and details are related and determine the controlling idea or thesis.
3
In her first well-known photographs, Margaret made the production of steel look magnificent, mysterious, and awe-inspiring. Her photos, filled with streams of melted steel and flying sparks, caught the eye of someone who would change her life.
Her mother gave Margaret her first camera in 1921, when she was 17 years old. In 1929, Henry Luce invited Margaret to work at Fortune Magazine. She jumped at the chance and became the first woman in a new field called photojournalism. In 1930, she was the first photographer from a Western country to be allowed into the Soviet Union (now Russia). When World War II broke out in 1939, Margaret became the first female war correspondent. This is a journalist who covers stories first hand from a war zone. In 1941, she traveled to the Soviet Union again and was the only foreign photographer in Moscow when German forces invaded.
Both Jackie Robinson and Margaret Bourke-White were motivated by the challenge of fitting in. Robinson was the first African American in the major leagues. Bourke-White was the first woman photojournalist. Both convinced critics that they belonged by using their skills and abilities. Like Donna O’Meara, Bourke-White also derived motivation from a sense of adventure.Powers and Bourke-White were also motivated by the advice and support they received. Powers was able to succeed in part because of the lesson Petzoldt taught him. Bourke-White was able to succeed in part because Henry Luce believed in her. Bourke-White appears to have dreamed of adventure from childhood. O’Meara, on the other hand, developed her passion for dangerous volcanoes later in life.
4
Multiple Choice
Choose the correct text structure: "In her first well-known photographs, Margaret made the production of steel look magnificent, mysterious, and awe-inspiring. Her photos, filled with streams of melted steel and flying sparks, caught the eye of someone who would change her life."
Chronological Order
Compare and Contrast
Descriptive
Problem and Solution
5
Multiple Choice
Choose the correct text structure: "Her mother gave Margaret her first camera in 1921, when she was 17 years old. In 1929, Henry Luce invited Margaret to work at Fortune Magazine. She jumped at the chance and became the first woman in a new field called photojournalism. In 1930, she was the first photographer from a Western country to be allowed into the Soviet Union (now Russia). When World War II broke out in 1939, Margaret became the first female war correspondent. This is a journalist who covers stories first hand from a war zone. In 1941, she traveled to the Soviet Union again and was the only foreign photographer in Moscow when German forces invaded."
Chronological Order
Compare and Contrast
Descriptive
Problem and Solution
6
Multiple Choice
Choose the correct text structure: "Both Jackie Robinson and Margaret Bourke-White were motivated by the challenge of fitting in. Robinson was the first African American in the major leagues. Bourke-White was the first woman photojournalist. Both convinced critics that they belonged by using their skills and abilities. Like Donna O’Meara, Bourke-White also derived motivation from a sense of adventure.Powers and Bourke-White were also motivated by the advice and support they received. Powers was able to succeed in part because of the lesson Petzoldt taught him. Bourke-White was able to succeed in part because Henry Luce believed in her. Bourke-White appears to have dreamed of adventure from childhood. O’Meara, on the other hand, developed her passion for dangerous volcanoes later in life."
Chronological Order
Compare and Contrast
Descriptive
Problem and Solution
7
8
Multiple Choice
Choose the correct text structure: " the steel mills, she wanted to be right next to the melted metal. The extreme heat sometimes burned her face and damaged the paint on her camera."
Chronological Order
Cause and Effect
Descriptive
Problem and Solution
9
Multiple Choice
Choose the correct text structure: " first, several people at the company wondered if a woman could stand up to the intense heat and generally dirty and gritty conditions inside a steel mill. When Margaret finally got permission, the technical problems began. Black-and-white film at that time was sensitive to blue light, not the reds and oranges of hot steel. The pictures came out all black. Margaret solved this problem by bringing along a new style of flare (which produces white light) and having assistants hold them to light her scenes. Her abilities resulted in some of the best steel factory pictures of that era, and these earned her national attention."
Chronological Order
Cause and Effect
Descriptive
Problem and Solution
What is Text Structure?
The 5 Types of Text Structure we will review are:
1. Sequential: describe a process or series of steps in sequential order (first, next, after, then, last)
Chronological: tell about events in chronological order (1901, 1908, 1912)
2. Descriptive: describing words/adjectives
3. Compare and Contrast: compare and contrast information
4. Cause and Effect: present causes and their effects
5. Problem and Solution: describe a problem and offer a solution
An informational text presents readers with information or ideas about real people, places, things, and events. In order to present information clearly, writers use text structures, or organizational patterns, to present information. There are different types of informational text structures.
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