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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
ELA 3: Look It Up 5 Views
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Description:
Say you're reading a textbook and you come across a word you don't know. Who wants to get up and go find the dictionary? Or a computer? Not us. Well luckily there's usually a thing called the glossary in the back of the book to help with that very problem. Today's lesson will tech you how to use it.
Transcript
- 00:09
You know the feeling.
- 00:10
There you are, completely lost in a book, when out of nowhere comes… [Boy reading a book quickly]
- 00:15
…a word you don't recognize. [Boy looks shocked]
- 00:17
Yup. It's a terrible feeling.
- 00:19
But does that mean you should stop reading and toss the book into the trash? [Boy putting the book into a trash can]
Full Transcript
- 00:23
No!
- 00:24
Because a little thing called a glossary might just be able to help you out. [Glossary pops out the bin]
- 00:27
A glossary is an alphabetical list of words related to a specific subject, with definitions. [Dino pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:33
You'll often find them in the back of a book, especially if the book contains a lot of specialized,
- 00:37
tricky language, like a textbook.
- 00:39
Often the words we find in glossaries are academic words: y'know, words that students [Professor holding a glossary]
- 00:44
tend to run into when they're studying at school.
- 00:46
Different academic subjects, like math and science, have their own set of academic words, [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:50
so chances are, you'll be reading plenty of glossaries in the future. [A conveyer belt of books runs in front of the kid]
- 00:53
And guess what?
- 00:54
If you already know how to use a dictionary, a glossary will be a breeze. [Kid with dictionary in one hand and glossary in the other]
- 00:58
Say you're reading a book about botany, aka the science of plants…
- 01:01
…and you come across this sentence: "In fossils, we can find evidence of xylem going
- 01:06
back hundreds of millions of years." [Kid pointing to the word xylem]
- 01:08
One of the words in there might be a little unfamiliar. [Boy looks shocked]
- 01:11
…and no, not "can." [Kid throws the flower in the trash can]
- 01:13
You don't exactly encounter the word "xylem" in everyday life. [Guy rides into a xylem road sign]
- 01:16
Unless that happens to be the name of your dog.
- 01:18
In which case, congratulations for your creative naming. [Kid holding a trophy]
- 01:21
However, on the off chance you don't happen to have a pooch named "Xylem," your best bet [Kid putting up a lost xylem poster]
- 01:26
is to flip to the glossary.
- 01:27
Since "xylem" starts with an "X," we skip the As, the Bs, and even those lovely Cs… [Pages being turned in a book]
- 01:32
…all the way down to the Xs.
- 01:34
And sitting right in plain view is the definition of xylem: the tissue in plants responsible
- 01:38
for conducting water and dissolved nutrients up from the root.
- 01:42
Having learned this new morsel of vocab, you can flip back to the page you were on and [The book is closed]
- 01:47
keep on reading.
- 01:48
Best of all, you didn't even need to get up and find a dictionary. [Kid sat in his chair]
- 01:50
Though you can get up, if you want.
- 01:52
Glossaries will never stand in the way of some light exercise. [Boy doing squats with weights]
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