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4th grade reading & vocabulary
Course: 4th grade reading & vocabulary > Unit 1
Lesson 5: Reading for understanding: drama and fictionReading (and comparing) multiple books | Reading
You know what's better than reading a book? Reading TWO BOOKS. Let's talk about how books and stories relate to one another, how book series work, and what you can learn from comparing stories from around the world.
Want to join the conversation?
- What's your favorite book series/book?
Mine's Keeper of the lost cities and Percy Jackson-^^(16 votes) - What is writing style and how do I identify in texts?(12 votes)
- A writing style is narrative, informative, and persuasive. You can identify this by seeing whether or not it is a story, if it is teaching you something, or whether it is convincing you about something.(12 votes)
- what is the book from austraila(11 votes)
- No idea! It might not even be real!(2 votes)
- I like the little it's a bawl rat people it is a good book.(9 votes)
- i have read 90 books But what if you dont read ? hmmmmmm mmmmmm(5 votes)
- do you mean ripoffs? 2:37(5 votes)
- They technically are not ripoffs. They could be but if they are ripoffs, they would be sued or something like that(0 votes)
- how do you even use a tipe righter(3 votes)
- A type righter is like a computer. You know that computers have keys. When you press a key in google, you can see the letter at the top. A typewriter works the same way but with paper. You press a key and ink comes out of these things and it uses ink and prints the letter or number onto the paper(3 votes)
- Question:
Is I survived a series? It is all about people surviving the impossible but the characters aren’t all the same. Ex: one book could have jake and another could have jack. So is it a series?
Thanks(3 votes)- yeah because it has more and more series of the same author and they are real!! it was nice helping you!|!(3 votes)
- one book is better then two(3 votes)
- If dave is funny upvote(3 votes)
Video transcript
- [David] Hello readers. You know what's better
than reading a book? Reading two books. Reading a bunch of books. Reading a mountain of books. This may sound self-evident, but great readers read a lot of books. Good readers read widely. They read lots of
different types of books. Sometimes these books will be similar, and sometimes they'll be very different, but one thing that good readers do is think about how what they are reading might connect with other books
they've read in the past. They think about how books
connect with other books. I have been reading a lot this year. Mostly cookbooks, mysteries
and science fiction novels, so they're alike in some
ways and different in others. Right now, I'm reading
these mystery novels that take place in Australia. They're all written by the same person and they all feature the
same main characters. A collection of books that
are about the same character in different situations
is called a series. Reading a series is a great way to see how the same
characters grow and change over a longer period of time. There's the hero of the series with a fabulous feather in her hair and a magnifying glass ready
to solve some mysteries. Now not all books by the same author are automatically part of the same series. Authors can write standalone books or start completely different series. Here's the author hard
at work on a typewriter, an ancient writing device. If you don't know what that is, politely ask an older person. Often, writers have a
similar writing style even when what they're
writing is not connected. For example, if you like funny books, and you find an author
that makes you laugh, chances are that the
other books they write could also be funny. Books can have similar plots. So the series I've been
reading is a mystery. The main character is a detective and she figures out how and
why someone committed a crime. After many years of reading, I've learned that I really like books that share this quality, of a hero that solves mysteries. But, just because two
books are both mysteries doesn't mean they're going
to work the same way. Two mysteries by two different writers with different characters and situations are going to be pretty
different from each other. As a reader, I have to
be careful not to assume that I know where a book is going to go just because I'm familiar with what kind of story it's telling. It's like fairytales, right? Every culture around the
world has traditional stories and those stories all pretty
much have the same purpose which is to teach people how
to behave like a good person. There are stories all around the world that have a similar structure
to the story of Cinderella. Young, poor girl with an evil stepmother, unfairly punished and then through magic and the goodness of her own
heart, she marries into royalty. There are thousands of
versions of this story from every culture on Earth. I love reading stories
from all over the world because it helps me understand the values that different cultures share or how they differ. This is why it's fun
to read lots of stories from different times and different people. It can help us understand
what's important to people, what was important to people in the past, or what's important to us now, and it's fun. Reading lots of books is fun. You might find an author or
a character that you love. You might be transported to
a whole new land or time. Reading widely and thinking
about how books connect is the best way to become a better reader, and you might just solve a mystery or two while you're at it. You can learn anything, David out.