Not exact matches
Tracey Maurer, writer of over 100
nonfiction books, talked with students
about how she does research, works with a publisher, and comes up with ideas for her
texts.
Your students will absolutely love this short passage of
nonfiction informational
text about none other than the highly decorated Drew Brees — the New Orleans Saints quarterback.
They also expect students to prepare for the workplace by reading and writing
about a wide variety of
nonfiction texts.
In 4th grade,
about half the
texts students read should be fiction and half should be
nonfiction, the standards say.
The
nonfiction article is
about Hyenas from National Geographic and the fiction
texts are Pinduli by Janell Cannon and Harvesting Hope: The Story of Cesar Chavez by Kathleen Krull.
This expository
nonfiction text is
about how an oak tree may become vulnerable to disease from its bark being damaged by a bear clawing...
This expository
nonfiction text is
about how living things have adapted traits of mimicry or camouflage to either fool or attract prey...
Reading features fiction, literary
nonfiction, poetry, exposition, document, and procedural
texts or pairs of
texts, and focuses on identifying explicitly stated information, making complex inferences
about themes, and comparing multiple
texts on a variety of dimensions.
Clear
text and engaging topics provide a fun gateway for early learners to discover
nonfiction and learn
about nature with guidance from adults or on their own.
Some students -LSB-[https://www.scholastic.com/content/dam/teachers/blogs/angela-bunyi/migrated-files/grafittitable.jpg add ideas]-RSB- right away while other students use the ideas listed to help build connections to information they learned during the lesson (e.g., a specific fact from the
text, an idea
about nonfiction text structure, a skill readers use).
Issues cover a wide range of real - world topics kids love to learn
about — and it's the best
nonfiction text you'll find!