COMING SOON: Unit 6 Novel Study




Start Reading Your Novel NOW



It is time to select and read your novel, in preparation for the Novel Study in Unit 6.  After you have selected your novel, plan an effective reading schedule so you are finished reading and annotating the text in time for you to begin Unit 6.


Your novel choices for this course are (click to view):



  Reading Strategies



Reading strategies result in readers making text come alive and understanding meaning. Review the reading strategies you learned in previous units.  Following are two reading strategies:

    Skimming is reading a text quickly to understand its main points.
Scanning is to glance through text to locate specific pieces of information.
Skim and scan the following features before reading your novel:

 Covers
  •  A front cover includes the title of the story and the authorโ€™s name, and it may include an image to represent the story.
  • The back cover often includes a very brief summary to increase interest in the book, and possibly some reviews from other readers.
 Dedication
  • A dedication is a short message written by the author devoting the book to someone or something significant to the author. Dedications usually are presented at the beginning of the book and sometimes appear on a separate page.
Antoine de Saint-Exupรฉry wrote this dedication in his novel The Little Prince.
To Leon Werth.
โ€“ I ask children to forgive me for dedicating this book to a grown-up. I have a serious excuse. This grown-up is the best friend I have in the world. I have another excuse: this grown-up can understand anything, even books for children. I have a third excuse: he lives in France where he is hungry and cold. He needs to be comforted. If these excuses are not enough, then I want to dedicate this book to the child this grown-up once was. All grown-ups were children first (but few of them remember it), so I correct my dedication.
To Leon Werth 
when he was a little boy.

 Acknowledgements
  •  An acknowledgement page contains the authorโ€™s statement of thanks to people who have provided assistance or support in the writing of the story. 
  • Authors may thank their publishers, editors, sources, illustrators, and/or their family members - whoever was helpful as the story was being written.
 Prologue
  •  A prologue is an introduction to a story that provides some details about events that have occurred in the past or details about the characters in the novel. Some novels have prologues; many do not.
 Special Features
  • Some novels contain more than the written words. You may find illustrations or pictures, glossaries, maps, timelines, or family trees.
  • These special features may be placed at the beginning or end of the novel, or sometimes they are scattered throughout the story. 


Be an engaged reader



Another strategy to consider is to read your novel slowly. View the following video on slow reading.

See more active reading strategies on the next page.