Find Your Sport
Find Your Sport is an expository nonfiction text that explains why you should play sports, team sports, having good sportsmanship, safety during sports, and making time to be active. The back of the book includes a section on Michelle Obama. Readers gain information from text and graphics. A two-page experiment written in third-person procedural language invites students to learn how to check their pulse, as it’s important during exercise.
Find Your Sport is divided into sections with some subsections. Illustrations, such as some labeled photos, diagrams, and charts support the text. Fact boxes appear throughout the text to provide students with additional learning opportunities. Periods, commas, quotations marks, question marks, and exclamation marks are used. A table of contents, glossary, and an index support the reader.
Plurals, base words with affixes, and a variety of verbs with inflectional endings are used. Subordinate clauses, and possessives are used in the text. The text contains many adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, connectives, and compound words. Hyphenated words are used. The text occasionally makes use of parenthetical material embedded in sentences. Glossary words are bold faced throughout the text. Some words appear in the vocabulary of mature language users.
This title is from the Science Readers: A Closer Look series from Teacher Created Materials. Build literacy skills and science content knowledge with high-interest, appropriately levelled information texts.