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jolli1 [7]
3 years ago
15

The graphic shows a cause and effect organizational aid.

English
2 answers:
trapecia [35]3 years ago
6 0

The correct answer is A. Gets good grades

Explanation:

Graphic organizers are diagrams based on visual symbols mainly use to show how different concepts or ideas connect to each other, because of this graphics can organize information according to similarities/ differences, time, topic /subtopics, cause/effect, among others. These organizers are widely used in the educational contexts as they help teacher and students organize and understand information better.

In the case of cause and effect graphics or information organizers the causes are presented first and then the effect of these ideas is presented and connected with lines or arrows that let the reader know certain ideas let to another idea, in this case, the causes are the concepts or ideas that are in blue "stays focused", "studies daily" and "does all homework" and these ideas that describe the actions of a student let to another one which is the effect of the three previous ideas "Gets good grades". In this way, the result of the effect of the ideas in blue is the big idea in red that is equally shown by the arrows of the graphic. Thus, the end result of this chart is that a student gets good grades a result of staying focused, studying daily and doing all homework.

Rudik [331]3 years ago
3 0

The answer would be A. Gets good grades because the chart shows that they stay focused, studies daily, and does all his homework.

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7 0
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Answer:

+10

bezglasnaaz and 10 more users found this answer helpful

Strategy 1: Use of Context

One strategy is that of using sentence or passage-level context to infer the meaning of a word or phrase. Although some researchers feel that use of context, which is an “around-the-word” strategy, is not always reliable (that is, the context may not be rich enough to help students actually understand the meaning of a word or may lead them to a wrong conclusion), others have found that most new words are learned from context. Also, increasingly, standardized assessments require students to read a passage with an underlined word, answer a multiple choice question with four possible definitions of the word, and then answer a second related multiple choice question where the object is to provide evidence from the passage that supports the chosen definition.

Strategy 2: Use of Word Parts

Imagine a fifth grade class where a teacher can hold up a card with a word like abolitionist written on it, and within a minute small groups of students have figured out the meaning of the word—without the teacher uttering one sound.

This is not an imaginary classroom. Leslie Montgomery, who teaches in a high poverty public elementary school, regularly witnesses this phenomenon. Her students have learned the power of using the meanings of prefixes, roots, and suffixes (especially common Greek and Latin roots) to figure out the meanings of words.

As they talk through their reasoning, it is clear her students are developing “morphological awareness,” or understanding about the structure and origin of words. This skill can often seem like magic to kids, but is really sophisticated vocabulary knowledge that they need in order to learn at higher levels.

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