D. making predictions.
When you're reading, you want to make sure that you're not only asking questions about the text but that you are also taking the information you're learning and making predictions for what might happen or for what you might learn later on. By making predictions you show that you are actively reading and absorbing the information in a way that you can then start thinking about where else it might go.
Typically when the narrator uses information that you could probably find somewhere trustworthy, like a textbook and goes on to give specific information that you would need to know for a unit or group of tests. For example, if the passage says "Christopher Columbus didn't actually mean to find the Americas, I guess you could say it was a happy mistake." That would be academic.
Answer:
B.) Is about the real theft of a young lady's curl