Question detail

For Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction, which option best applies comparison and viewpoint to this objective: Explain how contextual clues help shape understanding of a writer's perspective.

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction

Question

  1. A. Compare both viewpoints with a similarity, a difference and a whereas link for Explain how contextual clues help
  2. B. Write about only one source in Understanding non-fiction sources
  3. C. List two ideas without comparing them for Explain how contextual clues help
  4. D. Use a quotation without explaining the contrast in Section A Reading non-fiction and literary non-fiction

Answer

Explain how contextual clues help answer: Compare both viewpoints with a similarity, a difference and a whereas link for Explain how contextual clues help.

Explanation

Explain how contextual clues help uses Compare both viewpoints with a similarity, a difference and a whereas link for Explain how contextual clues help because it matches the comparison and viewpoint focus for Understanding non-fiction sources. It separates the skill from weaker choices and keeps the response tied to the exact objective. Use AO3: compare both sources with a clear similarity, difference and whereas link instead of writing two separate summaries. Understanding non-fiction sources should plan audience, purpose, form, tone, viewpoint, content and structure before drafting.

Common mistake

perspective: summary instead of analysis

Students sometimes summarise Understanding non-fiction sources instead of explaining how the objective works in the answer.

Correct this by selecting a brief detail, explaining its effect, and linking the point back to "Explain how contextual clues help shape understanding of a writer's perspective."

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