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5th grade reading & vocabulary
Course: 5th grade reading & vocabulary > Unit 2
Lesson 3: Close reading: informational text; Fast and FemaleReading more than one source on a topic | Reading
Reading multiple texts on a topic helps you gain expert knowledge, find the truth, and support your arguments. Different sources offer various perspectives and ideas. By comparing them, you can form your own opinions and become a better thinker.
Want to join the conversation?
- Aren't the deadliest animals on earth Mosquitos? They transmit malaria, which is estimated to have killed half of all human beings that have ever lived, which is a lot. There have been about 107 billion people ever alive, and since Malaria, transmitted by mosquitoes killed half of them (53.5) billion people.(37 votes)
- I know i love hipos 8( there cool 8( Mosquitos bad(7 votes)
- Hey David, what book did you write? I want to buy it and read it. :>(31 votes)
- I am pretty sure it is called Crypto Zoology! If this help please show support by upvoting this (:(14 votes)
- There are some hedgehogs more dangerous than bears. Its name is Sonic. Sonic the Hedgehog. 2:02(14 votes)
- Hey,I like sonic and I watched the SONIC 2 movie!(3 votes)
- why are there dangerous animals?(7 votes)
- Animals don't like getting eaten. The animals that don't get eaten usually have something about them that deters others, such as spikes or poison or horns or claws. Those sort of features make them dangerous.(10 votes)
- hi I'm Vietnamese and I'm I 3 grade I'm doing tcap I'm about to be done so if you wish me luck upvote me and my name is ryan phan i go to idlewild school in linden ave(9 votes)
- what school do you go to(3 votes)
- Why does the octopuses have glasses up vote if this makes sense(8 votes)
- First of all, it's pronounced octopi.(3 votes)
- What is the book David?(8 votes)
- The book is called 'Animal Attack'(2 votes)
- At--- 1:57, is that a hedgehog or a sheep? 2:00(4 votes)
- I thought that was a hedgehog. I had no idea that David was trying to draw a sheep.(7 votes)
- I'm in the same class as Ryan we just finished tcap give me good luck pls(7 votes)
- mesqitos are the deadlyest(6 votes)
Video transcript
- [Narrator] Hello readers,
today I wanna talk to you about why we read more
than one text on one topic. And to show you why I shall use a subject that is very near and dear to my heart, animals that can kill you. This is not a joke. I legitimately wrote a book
about this a few years ago, and to research this book about the world's deadliest animals, I read a lot of other books and sources. So I wanna use this experience
to show you why it's important to read more than
one source on a subject. Okay, so why do it? Why not say all right, I read one text about the
Pacific Blue-ringed octopus. Why do I need to read two or three or 20? There are a couple reasons. Let's start with the
first, expert knowledge. If you wanna know all about octopuses, you can't just look at a
single piece of writing say, "Bam, got it, know all I need to know "I am the knower of octopus facts." No, you can't do it. If you want to become an expert, you need to be able to
say well, this book says the Pacific octopus toxin
can stop your heart. But this one says that
you can tell whether or not an octopus is
frightened by its color. Reason number two to
read multiple sources, helping to determine or know what's true. Sometimes people get things wrong. It helps to read more
than one text to make sure you're getting as many
perspectives or ideas as you can. Sometimes information from an old book might be outdated or
information from a new book hasn't yet been proven to be true. Reading different texts
can help you decide what you think about a topic, or even whether or not something is true. We can answer questions like, what is the deadliest animal? Or how do we even define deadliest? Reason number three, to read multiple texts on the same topic, supporting an argument. The more information you
can get about a topic, the more support you can give to your own opinions or arguments. I think that this animal
is the most dangerous because I've read a
bunch of different works about dangerous animals and I can support it with
evidence, you would say. If I were to say that
bears are more dangerous than I don't really know what I drew, I thought I was trying to draw a sheep but I think it's a hedgehog. If I were to try to argue that bears are more dangerous than hedgehogs, I would use multiple sources to provide evidence for those claims. Bears are taller, bears are heavier, bears have sharper teeth,
bears are stronger. Hedgehogs or sheep are cuter and cuddlier sorry to bears. It's important to recognize
that different books have different arguments in them. Every book has a different angle, right? Sometimes it's obvious
like a book with the title, "Deadly animals and how to hunt them" versus a book called "Deadly animals and how to
protect their habitats." People have opinions
and people make books. So, that means that books
can have opinions too. Are these animals cool or terrifying? Should they be hunted or protected? Reading one text on a subject doesn't give you the full story. It's important to be able
to read more than one text, compare them and then decide
what you think from that. It helps to have a purpose
in mind too as you read. Oh, and to answer your unspoken question, the deadliest animals on earth
are definitely human beings but in a close second place is hippos. Those guys will bite you in half. So you know, watch out for hippos. You can learn anything. David out.