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Scholastic Teaching Resources. 35 Reading Passages for Comprehension: Main Ideas & Summarizing PDF

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s e c ur o s e R g n hi c a e T c sti by Linda Ward Beech a ol h c S h, c e e B d ar W a d n Li © g n zi ari m m u S & s a e d n I ai M n: o si n e h e pr m o C or s f e g a s s a P g n di a e R 5 3 NEW YORK • TORONTO • LONDON • AUCKLAND • SYDNEY MEXICO CITY • NEW DELHI • HONG KONG • BUENOS AIRES s e c ur o s e R g n hi c a e T c sti a ol h c S h, c e e B d ar W a d n Li © g n zi ari m m u S & s a e d n I ai M n: o si n e h e pr m o C Scholastic Inc.grants teachers permission to photocopy the designated reproducible pages from this book or for classroom use.No other partof this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part,or stored in a retrieval es f g system,or transmitted in anyformor by anymeans,electronic,mechanical,photocopying,recording, sa s a or otherwise,without written permission of the publisher.For information regarding permission, P g write to Scholastic Inc.,557 Broadway,New York,NY 10012. din a e R Cover design by Maria Lilja 35 Interior design by Sydney Wright Interior illustrations by Mike Gordon ISBN-13 978-0-439-55412-1 ISBN-10 0-439-55412-8 Copyright © 2006 by Linda Ward Beech.All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. 12345678910 40 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 C ontents Introduction ................................................5 Using This Book es ..........................................5 c ur o s e R g Mini-Lessons: n hi c a Te Teaching About Main Ideas(and Supporting Details) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 c asti Teaching About Summarizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 ol h c S h, ec Learning Pages: e B d ar What Is a Main Idea? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 W a nd What Is Summarizing? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Li © g n arizi Main Ideas: Exercises 1–18.............................10 m m u S Summarizing: Exercises 19–35 & .......................28 s a e d n I Assessments: ai M on: Main Ideas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45 si n he Summarizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46 e pr m o C or Student Record..........................................47 s f e g a s s Answers Pa ...................................................48 g n di a e R 5 3 s e c ur o s e R g n hi c a e T c sti a ol h c S h, c e e B d ar W a d n Li © g n zi ari m m u S & s a e d n I ai M n: o si n e h e pr m o C or s f e g a s s a P g n di a e R 5 3 Introduction Reading comprehension involves numerous thinking skills.Identifying main ideas and the details that support them is one such skill.A reader who is adept at identifying main ideas makes better sense of a text and increases his or her comprehension of what is being communicated.Identifying main ideas is one Teacher step in reading nonfiction,but it is important that students go further.They Tip should also be able to use main ideas to summarize information.By summarizing as they read,students will be better able to recall important points.Exercises For students who 1–18 will help students learn to recognize main ideas and the details that develop need extra help, es them.Exercises 19–35 focus on practice in summarizing.Use pages 8 and 9 urc you might suggest o after you introduce the skills to give students help in understanding them. s that they keep e R g pages 8 and 9 n hi with them to c Using This Book a e refer to when T stic they complete ola Pages 8–9 the exercises. h c h, S After introducing main ideas and summarizing to students (see pages 6 and 7), ec duplicate and pass out pages 8 and 9.Use page 8 to help students review e B d what they have learned about finding main ideas and supporting details.By ar W explaining their thinking,students are using metacognition to analyze how they a nd recognized main ideas.Page 9 helps students review what they have learned Li © about summarizing. g n zi ari Pages 10–27 m m These pages provide practice in identifying main ideas and supporting details. u S & The first question for each passage asks students to identify the main idea, s a and the second question requires students to focus on supporting details.Tell e d n I students that some passages have explicit main ideas,which are stated in a ai M sentence,while other passages have implicit main ideas,which require students n: o to put the details together to determine the main idea.Students should fill in the Teacher si en bubble in front of the correct answer for each question. Tip h e pr m Co Pages 28–44 Students can s for These pages provide practice in summarizing.The first three questions help learn a lot if you ge students identify the key information in the paragraph.The fourth question review the finished a ass asks students to select the title that best summarizes the passage.Finally, exercises with them P ng students are asked to use their answers to summarize the information given. on a regular basis. di Encourage students a e R to explain their 5 Pages 45–46 3 thinking for each Use these pages to assess students’progress after they have completed the correct answer. practice pages. Ask them to point out the words Page 47 that helped them You may wish to keep a record of students’progress as they complete the identify main ideas. practice pages.Sample comments that will help you guide students to improving their skills might include: • reads carelessly • has trouble differentiating main ideas • misunderstands text from supporting details • doesn’t recognize main ideas • is weak in summarizing material 5 Mini-Lesson Teaching About Main Ideas (and Supporting Details) 1. Introduce the concept:Write these words on the chalkboard. ocean lagoon bay pond creek s e c 2. Model thinking: After students have correctly identified bodies of water as our s e what the words are about,continue the lesson by thinking aloud. R g n hi c a e T c sti a ol h c S h, c e e B Each of the words is d Each word names a ar W ageographic term. different body of water. a d n Li © g 3. Define the skill: Remind students that when they read a paragraph,the zin sentences in it are related to one another.The sentences are all about a main mari m idea.This is the key point in the paragraph.Explain that often the main idea is u S stated in the first sentence of a paragraph,but the main idea can also be given & s a in the middle or at the end of a paragraph. e d Tell students that the other sentences in a paragraph tell more about the ain I M main idea.These sentences give supporting details.A supporting detail might n: o be an example.It might also be a fact about the main idea or a description of it. si n e Explain that supporting details fill in information about the main idea and h e pr make the paragraph more interesting to read.Help students understand that m o the main idea is bigger or broader than the supporting details. or C Point out that sometimes the main idea is not stated in a single s f e g sentence.Instead,all the details suggest the main idea;in other words,the a s s a main idea is implied,as in the example above.Then the reader must figure it P g n out by asking questions such as “What is happening?”“What is this about?” di a e Use graphics to help students who are visual learners understand R 5 the concept. 3 MAIN IDEA DETAIL DETAIL DETAIL 6 Mini-Lesson Teaching About Summarizing 1. Introduce the concept: Draw five pictures on the board that convey the power of wind.(You may also create an overhead transparency using the illustrations below.) s e c ur o s e R g n hi c a e T c sti a ol h c S h, c e e B Ask students to make up a sentence that tells about all the pictures. d ar W da 2. Model thinking: After students have volunteered their sentences,help n Li them review the process they used by thinking aloud. © g n zi ari m m u S All the pictures show what & s happens when the wind blows. a e d n I The power of the wind is the main idea ai M suggested in each picture. n: sio Imight summarize this group of pictures n he by saying, The wind is strong and e mpr can make things move. o C or s f e g a ass 3. Define the skill: Explain that summarizing is a way to remember what P g you read (or see or hear).When you summarize,you look for the main ideas. n di a Then you try to state or restate them in your own words.Tell students that e R 5 adding details to a summary can be helpful.For example,you might say, 3 The wind is strong and can make things such as a kite move. Tell students that outlines and graphic organizers are often good ways to summarize information.For example: I.The power of the wind A.Bends trees B.Carries away hats C.Turns umbrellas inside out D.Helps kites fly E.Makes boats move 7 Name ______________________________________________________ Date _____________________________ Learning Page W I M I hat s a ain dea? When you read a nonfiction passage, it usually gives you a lot of information. How does a reader remember all this information? How does a reader make sense of it? A good reader sorts out the information. For example, a reader might think: s e c ur o s e R g What other information is n What is the “big picture” hi c in this passage? What is given? How does it help me Tea the main point of it? understand the main point? stic a ol h c S h, c e When you answer the first two questions, you identify the main idea. The main idea is Be d what the paragraph is about. When you answer the second two questions, you identify ar W a the supporting details. These details tell more about the main idea by describing or d n Li explaining what, where, why, how much, when, who, or how many. © g n zi ari m m Read the passage. Complete the statements. u S & Can snakes crawl in reverse? Well, no, but they can move in other ways. For example, as e d they can sidewind, which involves throwing the front of their body to one side and n I ai M then zigzagging the rest along the ground. Some snakes such as pythons can climb n: o trees, and some vipers can actually leap. Many snakes can swim, too. nsi e h e pr m 1 o This passage is mainly about ________________________________________________ C or s f _________________________________________________________________________ ge a s s a P 2 One detail about the main idea is ____________________________________________ ding a e R _________________________________________________________________________ 35 3 Another detail about the main idea is ________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ 4 The details help me understand the main idea because they _____________________ _________________________________________________________________________ 8 Name ______________________________________________________ Date _____________________________ Learning Page W I S hat s ummarizing? When you read nonfiction, you want to remember what you read. However, it isn’t necessary to recall every word. Instead, you can use the main ideas to help you sum- marize a passage. s e c ur A good reader first finds the main ideas. Keep in mind that the main points are o s e R not always stated; sometimes they are implied or suggested. After finding the main g n hi ideas, a reader might think: c a e T c How can I restate the main sti a idea in my own words? ol h c S h, c ee The next thing a reader does is to identify supporting evidence for the main idea. B d ar This evidence can be details, examples, explanations, descriptions, or statistics that W da expand the main idea. Often, it is helpful to use an outline or a graphic organizer n Li © to summarize information. g n zi ari m m Read this passage. Complete the statements. u S & s Where is the Grand Canyon? Most people think it is in Arizona. However, many a e d n I other states have their own grand canyons, too.The Waimea Canyon is known as ai M the Grand Canyon of Hawaii. People in North Dakota think of the Painted Canyon n: o si in that state as their grand canyon.And Californians use the nickname for a canyon n e h pre on the floor of the Pacific Ocean.This underwater grand canyon is officially called m Co the Monterey Bay Canyon. or es f 1 ag This paragraph is mainly about ______________________________________________ s s a P ng _________________________________________________________________________ di a e R 5 _________________________________________________________________________ 3 2 A good title for this paragraph would be ______________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ 3 A detail I might include in a summary would be _______________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ 9 Name ______________________________________________________ Date _____________________________ EXERCISE M I 1 ain deas Read each paragraph. Choose the best answers. s e c You probably know that guide dogs are used to lead blind people. Did you know that a ur o s few blind people have guide horses? These are miniature horses trained much as guide Re g n dogs are.The small horses respond to more than 25 commands.They can see well in hi c a e the dark.They are also trained to tap with a hoof on the door if they need to go out. T c sti One man has even taken his guide horse on an airplane! a ol h c S 1 The main idea of this paragraph is ch, e e B A How guide dogs are trained C The use of small horses as guides ard W B A guide horse on an airplane D Why blind people like animals da n Li © 2 A supporting detail is ng zi A Guide dogs lead blind people. C Miniature means small. mari m u B The horses respond to 25 commands. D Airlines welcome guide horses. & S s a e d n I ai M n: Dictionary writers are always busy.That’s because the English language keeps changing. o si n e People stop using some words, and new words keep popping up.Where do new words h e pr m come from? Many recent words are from technology. For example, snailmail came into o C use after people started using the much faster e-mail. Other new words come from or s f e books, television, movies, and fads. Do you know what a wannabe is? If not, you can ag s s a look it up in a recently published dictionary. g P n di a 3 Re The main idea of this paragraph is 5 3 A Dictionaries show changes in English. C Why dictionary writers are so tired B How television affects English D How to find new words in a dictionary 4 A supporting detail is A Snails help to deliver the mail. C Old dictionaries are not useful. B Many words come from technology. D The English language never changes. 10

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.