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Central Idea, Made by:, image - Coggle Diagram
Central Idea
Annotation
Previously, you learned how to identify the central idea. As you read a story or text, you will find that you need to remember important details in addition to the central idea to help you make sense of the story. In the opening of this lesson, you learned several important details about the characters in "The Cold Equations." To help you remember important details about a story or text, taking notes will help.
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Writing Responses
Once you have identified questions that are relevant to the story you are reading, you can write them down in a notebook or type them into a document where you can answer with your own thoughts. These thoughts should be written as though you are having a conversation with the literature.
example:Goldilocks broke into the bear house without permission. There he tested the chair of each one of them, breaking the one of the bear. He also tested the beds of each of the bears falling asleep in mother bear's bed. ”The sentence in red is the central idea, as it says in a single sentence what the paragraph is about
Definition:A central idea dominates the meaning and significance of the paragraph with which we give substance to a writing. The central idea is the motivation in each area of the development of the exhibition
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