Compare And Contrast And Informative Paragraph Writing Question Preview (ID: 55225)


This Is A Review Of Compare And Contrast And Informative Paragraph Writing. TEACHERS: click here for quick copy question ID numbers.

How do you make a topic sentence for both Compare and Contrast and Informative Paragraphs?
a) Combine the Subject with the Sequence Words
b) Combine the Key Point with the Synonyms
c) Combine the Key Point with the Clincher
d) Combine the Subject with the Key Point

How do you get supporting sentences for both Compare and Contrast and Informative Paragraphs?
a) Brainstorm and Sequence
b) Sequence and Synonyms
c) Brainstorm and Guesswork
d) Subject and Key Point

What type of sentence do both Compare and Contrast and Informative Paragraphs end with?
a) Supporting Sentence
b) Topic Sentence
c) Restatement Sentence or Clincher
d) Sequential Sentence or Topic

What is the definition of Compare?
a) To show the differences between two or more things
b) To make judgments about how good something is
c) To give your best guess as to the meaning of something
d) To show the similarities between two or more things

What is the definition of Contrast?
a) To show the differences between two or more things
b) To make judgments about how good something is
c) To give your best guess as to the meaning of something
d) To show the similarities between two or more things

How many columns do we use on the planning sheet for a Compare and Contrast paragraph?
a) One
b) Fourteen
c) Three
d) Twenty-six

How do we sequence a Compare and Contrast paragraph?
a) We make a guess about where things should go.
b) We use rows of information from the planning sheet.
c) We make it up out of our head and don't use a planning sheet.
d) We use our synonyms.

What type of paragraph uses the sequencing words: Both, Each, However, and These?
a) Compare and Contrast
b) Informative
c)
d)

What is the definition of Informative?
a) To show the similarities and differences between two or more things
b) To describe something to an audience
c) To get someone to agree with you about something
d) To provide information to your audience

What is the definition of Sources?
a) Words that have the same meaning.
b) Places where you get the information you write about.
c) Where you record your information when brainstorming an Informative Paragraph
d) Words you use to put your ideas into order.

What is the definition of Collection Sheet?
a) Words that have the same meaning
b) Places where you get the information you write about.
c) Where you record your information when brainstorming an Informative Paragraph.
d) Words you use to put your ideas into order.

What type of order involves sequencing information based on what is first most important, second most important, third most important and so on?
a) Order of Importance
b) Chronological Order
c) Spatial Order
d) The First Order

How many categories of information do we use when planning an Informative Paragraph?
a) One
b) Fifteen
c) One Hundred and Nine
d) Six

What type of order do we use when sequencing an Informative Paragraph?
a) Spatial Order
b) The First Order
c) Order of Importance
d) Chronological Order

How are Informative Paragraphs different from other types of paragraphs?
a) You make them up out of your head.
b) You use information taken from other sources.
c) You compare things that are the same.
d) You describe something that you know about.

When writing an RST (Research Simulated Task) or on a state exam, how many sources do you use for your Informative Paragraph?
a) Three
b) Sixteen
c) Nine
d) One

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