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  • - [David] Hello, readers.

  • Today I'm gonna be talking about text features.

  • Which is to say, the parts of a text

  • that aren't just words.

  • We look at text features to get a better understanding

  • of what the text is all about.

  • Although they're not words.

  • Like I said, text features help our reading comprehension.

  • So what's a good example of a text feature?

  • Well, let's start with, ah, say, a map.

  • Maps are a great example of a feature of the text

  • that isn't made up of words.

  • So this is a social studies textbook.

  • This section is about Egypt.

  • I've turned to this page where there is a map.

  • What is this map of?

  • Well, we can look at this part here.

  • This text here over on the side is a caption.

  • It's something that can tell us about an image.

  • And the map is labeled.

  • So it's about the Nile River

  • and how the Nile River is fed from rainfall to the south,

  • the water travels to the north.

  • Here's Egypt up here.

  • Don't focus too much on the details

  • of this being about the Nile and stuff.

  • Really, what we're talking about is here is an image,

  • there is a caption next to the image,

  • reading the caption helps us understand

  • what's in the image, and looking at the image

  • helps us understand what's in the caption.

  • So we've got maps, we've got images.

  • And that can be illustrations, photos,

  • blueprints, anything really.

  • And if we go back to our social studies textbook,

  • we can see here there's this image.

  • And just looking at the image on its own,

  • we might not be able to tell what that is exactly.

  • But again, there is another helpful little caption

  • over to the side that says

  • this is an aerial view of the Nile.

  • So now we know what this is.

  • And that can help ground us as we go

  • through the rest of the text, which is also,

  • I assume, about the Nile River an ancient Egypt.

  • The caption and its picture are two halves of a whole.

  • They're both helping you understand the other.

  • Other useful text features include charts, diagrams,

  • and graphs, which can include things like timelines.

  • This page here has a table.

  • You can see up at the top,

  • this top row is labeled Ancient Egypt.

  • And then on the left, we have

  • all the different periods of Egyptian history.

  • And on the right, all the dates

  • associated with those periods.

  • There's also a timeline in this lesson.

  • And this one has a bunch of different text elements, right?

  • So we have, it's not a traditional-looking timeline,

  • but you can see that it's arranged

  • from top to bottom, oldest to most recent.

  • Those are just some of the many options

  • that are available to you when you look at a text.

  • Remember that when you're reading a passage,

  • it's not just the words, it's everything on the page.

  • Sometimes I even like to familiarize myself

  • with the charts or the diagrams or the images on the page

  • before I start reading, before I really get down

  • to the business of reading the paragraphs.

  • Because that helps me get rooted.

  • It helps me anchor myself

  • in what the text is gonna be about.

  • I look at the pictures, I skim the captions

  • just to say, "Okay, what's goin' on here?

  • "Cool, we're talkin' about rivers.

  • "We're talkin' about ancient Egypt.

  • "I'm ready."

  • And building those skills of readiness

  • and being able to anchor yourself

  • in any text that you encounter

  • is what's gonna make you a strong reader.

  • You can learn anything.

  • David out.

- [David] Hello, readers.

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