PPT-Inferences

Author : liane-varnes | Published Date : 2015-09-29

Monday 214 INFERENCE When you combine your own experiences and information from text to draw a conclusion not directly stated in the text INFERENCE Scenario 1 You

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Inferences: Transcript


Monday 214 INFERENCE When you combine your own experiences and information from text to draw a conclusion not directly stated in the text INFERENCE Scenario 1 You see a person leaving Invesco. B5.3 1 Comprehension B5.3 MAKING INFERENCES ( BEGINNING LEVEL ) Drawing Inferences You have been drawing inferences all your life. You began to make many kinds of inferences when you were a baby. Yo Context Clues . Context Clues:. words or phrases surrounding a difficult word that can help you define its meaning. . Read the passage on the next slide and supply context clues for the underlined words. . Intriguing Literature Forces the Reader to Ask Questions. Discuss. Why would an author choose to leave information out of his story? . 2. How do we, as readers, reliably fill in this information? . To Make an Inference . Dan . Klerman. & Yoon-Ho Alex Lee. Law and Economic Theory Conference. December 7, 2013. MOTIVATING QUESTION. Take . an area of private law. .. Suppose in . State A. , the legal . standard . governing liability is . 8. th. Grade Earth Science. “Notice all the computations, theoretical scribblings, and lab equipment, Norm….Yes, curiosity killed these cats.”. Observations. Inferences. Observations. Inferences. What is an Inference?. An inference is something that you conclude based partly on evidence and partly on your own knowledge. . When you make an inference, you read something, add what you know to it, and draw a conclusion.. Objective: Using your senses to create observations, use your observations now to create an inference.. After we observe and collect data, we try to . explain . what may have happened.. This is called an inference. . Grades 3 – 5. © 2013 Texas Education Agency / The University of Texas System. “ Inferring is the bedrock of comprehension, not only in reading. We infer in many realms. Our life clicks along more smoothly if we can read the world as well as text. Inferring is about reading faces, reading body language, reading expressions, and reading tone as well as reading text.”. An.  inference is an idea or conclusion that's drawn from evidence and reasoning. . An . inference.  is an educated . guess.. When reading a passage: 1) Note the facts presented to the reader and 2) use these facts to draw conclusions about . Cite textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text. .. ELAGSE.7.RL.1 . Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn . Foreshadowing and Suspense. Content Objective: . The . S. tudent . W. ill . B. e . A. ble . T. o (SWBAT) make . inferences. and draw conclusions about foreshadowing and suspense, and provide evidence from text to support their understanding using their Interactive Notebook and various texts. Reading Skills: Making Inferences from Details. The Scarlet Ibis. by. James Hurst. Feature Menu. The Scarlet Ibis. by. James Hurst. The Scarlet Ibis. Introducing the Story. I thought myself pretty smart at many . Chapter 1. Section 1. Thinking Like a Scientist. pages #5 – #12.. Scientists use skills such as:. . 1. . observing. 2. . inferring. 3. . predicting. 4. . classifying. . and. 5. . making models. . Ernest Davis. Cognitum. 2016. July 11, 2016. TACIT . Toward Annotating Commonsense Inferences in Text. First text: Theft of the Mona Lisa. On a mundane morning in late summer in Paris, the impossible happened. The Mona Lisa vanished. On Sunday evening, August 20, 1911, Leonardo da Vinci's best-known painting was hanging in her usual place on the wall of the Salon .

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