Non-fiction text structures organize information into comprehensible
patterns. Knowing how to recognize and use these structures to navigate
non-fiction text greatly improves students' understanding of what they
read. Gail Saunders-Smith simplifies the process by providing teachers
of grades 4-8 with: ways to teach each of the five non-fiction text
structures: compare/contrast, cause/effect, sequence/procedure,
question/answer, and exemplification; engaging whole-class and
small-group activities using written, verbal, image, three-dimensional,
and technology responses; study skills for locating, recording, and
using information; tools for assessing student understanding, and
explanations of the text features that organize information within the
text structures; and mini-lessons for whole-class, small-group, and
independent application of students' text structure knowledge. Examples,
photographs, student samples, and graphic organizers support your
teaching, and a bibliography of professional books and resources for
locating leveled non-fiction texts make this a complete, ready-to-use
guide for improving student comprehension.