author's purpose strand teks talk image

Knowledge and Skills Statement

Author's purpose and craft: listening, speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. The student uses critical inquiry to analyze the authors' choices and how they influence and communicate meaning within a variety of texts. The student analyzes and applies author's craft purposefully in order to develop his or her own products and performances.

While reading a text aloud, use an anchor chart to illustrate the organization of the text. Encourage students to share their ideas as you build the chart as a group. After the chart has been completed, ask students to analyze the structure of the information on the chart and thus the text. Then, have students explain why the author may have decided to organize the text in such a way.

 

Further Explanation

This assessment requires students to describe how an author organizes ideas in a text to accomplish a particular purpose. Students should explain how the text structure helps the author achieve the purpose.

Students are expected to examine how the author’s purpose has a specific effect on readers. Authors write for diverse reasons. If the purpose is to entertain the readers, the author might choose to write a narrative or story. However, if the author wishes to convince a reader to believe an idea or take a course of action, the author will likely write an opinion essay.
Students are expected to describe how an author organizes ideas in a text to accomplish a particular purpose. For example, in an informational article about the solar system, the author may use a structure that compares the Sun, Earth, and Mars. By doing this, the author may want readers to understand how the Sun, Earth, and Mars share some physical characteristics.

Research

Meyer, B. J., & Ray, M. N. (2011). Structure strategy interventions: Increasing reading comprehension of expository text. International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 4(1), 127–152. Retrieved from https://eric.ed.gov/?q=expository+text&pr=on&ft=on&id=EJ1070453

Summary: In this literature review, researchers examine empirical studies designed to teach the structure strategy to increase reading comprehension of expository texts. Strategy interventions employ modeling, practice, and feedback to teach students how to use text structure strategically and eventually automatically. The analysis suggests that direct instruction, modeling, scaffolding, elaborated feedback, and adaptation of instruction to student performance are keys in teaching students to strategically use knowledge about text structure.