Text Structure - Teacher Guide

Grade 6 English Language Arts | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.6.R.2.1

FL B.E.S.T. Standard ELA.6.R.2.1

Analyze the impact of text structures on meaning in informational texts.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this unit, students will be able to:

Essential Vocabulary

Term Definition Signal Words
Compare/Contrast Shows similarities and differences between two or more things similarly, however, on the other hand, both, unlike, whereas, in contrast
Cause/Effect Explains why something happens and its results because, therefore, as a result, consequently, since, due to, leads to
Problem/Solution Presents a problem and one or more solutions the problem is, the solution is, solved by, one answer is, resolved
Chronological/Sequence Presents events or steps in time order first, next, then, finally, before, after, during, meanwhile, subsequently
Description Provides details and characteristics about a topic for example, such as, including, consists of, characterized by, features

Text Structure Quick Reference

Structure Purpose Graphic Organizer
Compare/Contrast Show how things are alike and different Venn Diagram, T-Chart
Cause/Effect Explain why events occur and their outcomes Flowchart, Cause-Effect Map
Problem/Solution Present issues and ways to address them Problem-Solution Chart
Chronological Show events or steps in order Timeline, Sequence Chain
Description Describe characteristics and features Web, Concept Map

Lesson Sequence (5-10 Minute Mini-Lessons)

Day Focus Activities
1 Introduction to Text Structure Define text structure and its purpose. Overview of five main types. Use Student Concept Worksheet.
2 Compare/Contrast & Cause/Effect Deep dive into these two structures with signal words and short passages.
3 Problem/Solution & Chronological Analyze these structures with examples. Practice identifying signal words.
4 Mixed Practice Work through Practice Worksheet. Identify multiple structures in longer texts.
5 Assessment Administer FAST Format Quiz. Review and reteach as needed.

Teaching Strategies

Strategy 1: Signal Word Hunt

Give students a short informational passage with signal words highlighted or circled. Have them identify which text structure the signal words suggest. Then confirm by reading the full passage. This trains students to use signal words as their first clue.

Strategy 2: Structure Sort

Prepare index cards with paragraph excerpts. In pairs, students sort cards into five piles by text structure. Then they discuss which signal words or content clues led to their decisions. This builds collaborative analysis skills.

Strategy 3: Graphic Organizer Match

After reading a passage, have students choose the most appropriate graphic organizer (Venn diagram, flowchart, timeline, etc.) and fill it in with information from the text. The choice of organizer demonstrates understanding of the structure.

Strategy 4: Author's Choice Analysis

Present the same information organized in two different structures. Ask: "Why might an author choose one structure over another? How does each structure affect your understanding?" This develops critical thinking about author's craft.

Common Misconceptions

Misconception: Every text has only one structure

Correction: Complex texts often use multiple structures. A passage about climate change might use cause/effect to explain why it happens, then problem/solution to discuss responses. Teach students to identify the primary structure while recognizing others.

Misconception: Signal words are always present

Correction: Some texts imply structure without explicit signal words. Teach students to also look at how ideas relate to each other, not just transition words. Ask: "What is the author doing with these ideas?"

Misconception: Sequence and chronological are only for historical texts

Correction: Chronological structure appears in how-to articles, scientific processes, recipes, and any text explaining steps. Sequence can be spatial (describing a location) or procedural (explaining a process).

Misconception: Description is not a "real" structure

Correction: Description is a valid structure when the author's primary purpose is to detail characteristics, features, or attributes of a topic. It's common in science texts describing organisms or geography texts describing regions.

Differentiation Strategies

For Struggling Learners

For Advanced Learners

FAST Test Connection

On the FAST assessment, text structure questions typically ask students to:

Key Strategy: Teach students to read the first and last sentences of paragraphs carefully - these often reveal the structure most clearly.

Materials Checklist