Drawing Conclusions and making inference

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Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences : 

Drawing Conclusions and Making Inferences Drawing conclusions is taking the facts you know to help you figure out what you don’t know.

Slide 2: 

Clue in the Story What I Know Character’s Traits Prediction

Slide 3: 

Clue in the Story The boy clenched his fists and scowled. What I Know Character’s Traits Prediction

Slide 4: 

Clue in the Story The boy clenched his fists and scowled. What I Know Anyone who clenches his fists and scowls is unhappy or angry about something. Character’s Traits Prediction

Slide 5: 

Clue in the Story The boy clenched his fists and scowled. What I Know Anyone who clenches his fists and scowls is unhappy or angry about something. Character’s Traits The boy sometimes has a short temper; he explodes quickly. Prediction

Slide 6: 

Clue in the Story The boy clenched his fists and scowled. What I Know Anyone who clenches his fists and scowls is unhappy or angry about something. Character’s Traits The boy sometimes has a short temper; he explodes quickly. Prediction The boy is going to have a confrontation with his mother.

Drawing Conclusions helps you take the hints from the passage you are reading and make guesses about what might happen.When you make a guess, that guess is called an inference. : 

Drawing Conclusions helps you take the hints from the passage you are reading and make guesses about what might happen.When you make a guess, that guess is called an inference.

An inference is a guess made when you do not actually see, hear, or feel what happened, but you think something happened because of other information you gathered from your senses. : 

An inference is a guess made when you do not actually see, hear, or feel what happened, but you think something happened because of other information you gathered from your senses.

If you hear the sound of glass breaking, you may infer (guess) that there is a car wreck. You do not know the details, and your guess may be wrong.The more hints you gather, the better your inference will be. : 

If you hear the sound of glass breaking, you may infer (guess) that there is a car wreck. You do not know the details, and your guess may be wrong.The more hints you gather, the better your inference will be.

Good Readers . . .· draw conclusions by connecting what they read with what they already know· synthesize new ideas and information· make predictions from their conclusions, decide whether those predictions are true or not as they readuse their predictions to extend what they know beyond what the author has written· : 

Good Readers . . .· draw conclusions by connecting what they read with what they already know· synthesize new ideas and information· make predictions from their conclusions, decide whether those predictions are true or not as they readuse their predictions to extend what they know beyond what the author has written·