Informational Text
source
a book, article, person, or other resource consulted for information
primary source
a document or physical object which was written or created during the time under study
secondary source
a document or written work created after an event
informational text
a nonfiction text, written to share factual information
citation
a notation, inserted into the text of an essay that refers to a source for the evidence used
opinion
a personal belief or view about something
thesis statement
a short statement, usually one sentence in the introduction, that summarizes the main point or claim of an essay and is developed, supported, and explained in the text by means of examples and evidence
fact
a statement that can be proved
description text structure
a topic, idea, person, place, or thing explained by its features, characteristics, or examples
credible
believable; reliable; trustworthy
sequence text structure
describes events in chronological order or tells the steps to follow to do or make something
compare and contrast text structure
explains how two or more things are alike and/or how they are different
text features
features such as headings, subheadings, pictures, captions, bold words, graphs, charts, diagrams, tables of contents, index that help a reader find important information
cause-effect text structure
first presents an action, and then describes the effects that result (or may result) from that action
supporting details
in the essay, these are facts or details that help develop and support the central idea or topic
problem solution text structure
presents a problem or question, and then responds with a solution or answer
expert opinion
recommendations of individuals who have expertise in a particular area
text structure
the author's method of organizing text
evidence
the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid
central idea
the main idea of a text
plagiarism
the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own
author's purpose
the reason the author has for writing: inform, persuade, and entertain
paraphrase
to restate in other words
signal words
transition words in an essay that alert the reader to a change in tone, direction, section, or category.
nonfiction text
writing that is factual