Help your child recognize how authors organize information
Text structure is the way an author organizes information in a text. Fifth graders learn to identify five main structures: compare/contrast, cause/effect, problem/solution, sequence, and description. Understanding text structure helps students comprehend and remember what they read.
On Florida's FAST assessment, students must identify text structures and explain how they help convey meaning.
Look at news articles or magazine features together and identify the text structure:
Ask: "How did the author organize this article? What signal words do you notice?"
TV commercials often use problem/solution structure! Watch commercials together and identify:
Recipes are perfect examples of sequence structure!
Science topics naturally use cause/effect structure. Discuss everyday phenomena:
Practice compare/contrast in daily conversations:
Use signal words: "Both... but... however... similarly... unlike..."
Help your child become a "signal word detective." When reading together, have them highlight or point out words like "because," "as a result," "however," "first," or "for example." These words are clues that reveal how the author organized the information!
Help your child visualize text structure by matching each type to its organizer:
Point out text structures in everyday life:
Que es la estructura del texto? Es la manera en que un autor organiza la informacion. Los estudiantes de quinto grado aprenden cinco estructuras principales:
Actividades en casa: