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07 Identify text structures (e.g., sequence/chronological order, classification, definition, process, description, comparison, problem/solution, cause/effect).
This lesson teaches five common text structures used in informational and nonfiction text: description, sequence, cause and effect, compare and contrast, and problem and solution.
These include the table of contents, index, glossary, headings, bold words, sidebars, pictures and captions, and labeled diagrams.
To make things easier to discuss, we'll classify text features into three different categories: directional features, supplementary features, and visual aids. Let's take a look now at the various types of text features that belong to each category.
Nonfiction Text Features Chart. Text features are extra visuals and print that authors include in books and other texts to help the reader understand the information better. For example, an author might mention a tiny nation that you've never heard of before.
When you analyze the structure of a work of nonfiction, you determine which of the five organizational patterns are present in the text: chronological, cause-and-effect, problem-and-solution, compare-and-contrast, and descriptive.
Structure controls the major elements of a story, including plot, characters, setting, and theme. In short stories, a narrative structure is most common. The structure affects the meaning of the story by organizing the theme of the writing.
Text Structure: The author's method of organizing a text. Cause/Effect: Causes stem from actions and events, and effects are what happen as a result of the action or event. Compare/Contrast: Placing together characters, situations, or ideas to show common or differing features in literary selections.
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