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English Language Arts Strategies/Overview. Big Picture Questions Reading Section Rules: 1. Look for...
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Transcript of English Language Arts Strategies/Overview. Big Picture Questions Reading Section Rules: 1. Look for...
English Language ArtsStrategies/Overview
Big Picture QuestionsBig Picture Questions Reading Section Rules:
1.Look for the main idea! This is a simple and effective way to increase comprehension of reading passages.
2.First eliminate answers that you know are wrong! Never look for the “right” answer.
Big Picture QuestionsBig Picture Questions “What it’s About” VS. “What
Happens”
Think about the movie “The Notebook.”
What is the movie generally about? _______________
What Happens?_________________
Big Picture QuestionsBig Picture Questions When reading passages, you should be
looking for the “what’s it about,” which is the brief statement of the overall theme.
Look for the defining sentence
Keep an eye out for examples: Writers use examples to support their main point, so reading them can help you understand the main idea.
Don’t worry about specific facts.
Big Picture QuestionsBig Picture Questions
BIG PICTURE questions based on the MAIN IDEA of the
passage make up about 1/3 of the CAHSEE English test.
In other words, simply figuring out a passage’s main idea and knowing
which questions to use it on gets you
15 points!
DETAIL QUESTIONSDETAIL QUESTIONS Detail Questions ask you to focus on specific
words or parts of the passage, and they fall into two basic groupings:
DETAIL QUESTION TYPE #1: CONNOTATION
Connotation is the meanings of words and phrases within the passage.
The key is to first identify the main idea which will help you understand the word in its context.
Even if you don’t know the word, eliminate obvious wrong answers!
DETAIL QUESTIONSDETAIL QUESTIONS
“What’s it Say?” Questions
These questions ask you to use information and SPECIFIC FACTS in the passage to answer direct questions about what it literally said in a particular part of a passage.
POEMS and PLAYSPOEMS and PLAYS Poems and Plays function almost exactly the
same as “normal” reading passages.
Only difference is there are more detail questions.
Process for poems and plays:
1. Look for main idea or theme.
2. Identify the type of question (big picture vs. detail)
3. Eliminate wrong answers.
Two-Passage StrategyTwo-Passage Strategy Two-passage selections are always a
student fear.
You should treat them as two separate passages. Read the first passage and answer the questions that only relate to the first passage BEFORE moving on to to the second passage and the remaining questions.