Author’s Purpose, Tone, and Formality
Determine why authors write, distinguish tone and mood, and compare levels of formality across texts.
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How to Identify an Author’s Purpose
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How This Builds on Theme: Finding an Author’s Purpose (Grade 6)
Remember how we dug into theme and message — finding the big idea the author wants you to carry out of a story? Good. Now we flip the microscope slightly. Instead of asking what the story means, we ask why the author wrote it in the first place. That reason — the author’s purpose — helps explain the choices you noticed when analyzing theme: tone, formality, word choice, and those powerful quotes you matched to themes.
This is the moment where the concept finally clicks: themes tell you what the message is; purpose tells you why the message was written.
Hook: A tiny thought experiment
Imagine you find a note on your desk that says:
- "Buy more socks."
Is that the same as a note that says:
- "Did you know most people need three pairs of socks? Learn why."?
Same topic — socks — but two very different purposes. One is a quick reminder (to help you do something). The other might be to inform or even persuade if it’s written to convince you to buy more socks. Spotting the difference is exactly what we do next.
What is Author’s Purpose? (Simple and Bold)
Author’s purpose = the main reason the writer composed the text.
Most of the time, it falls into one of three categories (easy to remember if you picture three tiny signposts):
- To Inform — give facts or explain something (textbooks, news articles, how-to guides)
- To Persuade — make you agree, buy, or act (ads, opinion pieces, speeches)
- To Entertain — amuse or tell a story (fiction, poetry, jokes, comics)
Sometimes writers mix them, but usually one purpose is strongest.
Quick Clues to Spot Purpose (Your Detective Checklist)
- Look at the title and genre. Is it an article, a letter, a poem, or a review? Genre gives a big hint.
- Read the first and last paragraph. Authors often state their purpose near the start or wrap up clearly at the end.
- Ask the three magic questions:
- What does the author want me to know? (inform)
- What does the author want me to do or believe? (persuade)
- What does the author want me to feel or imagine? (entertain)
- Check for evidence types: facts and dates = inform; strong opinions and commands = persuade; dialogue and sensory detail = entertain.
- Notice the tone and formality. A serious, formal tone often appears in informative texts; emotional, urgent tone often appears in persuasive pieces; playful or descriptive tone shows entertainment.
Micro explanation: Tone and Formality
Tone is the author’s attitude (serious, funny, angry, kind). Formality is how polite or casual the writing is. Both help reveal the purpose. For example, formal and fact-filled often equals inform; loud and opinionated often equals persuade; relaxed and descriptive equals entertain.
Example (Short Passage + Walkthrough)
Passage:
The sun sank behind the hills as Maya tied her skates. The rink smelled of lemon cleaner and hot chocolate. She skated until the stars blinked on, and by then she had learned the spin she thought she never would.
Step-by-step detective work:
- Genre: Short story/slice of life → leans toward entertain.
- Clues: sensory details (smell, stars), a small emotional change (she learned a spin) → author wants you to feel and imagine.
- Tone: warm, gentle, hopeful → supports entertain.
Answer: The author’s purpose is to entertain.
Now compare with a different passage about the same event:
Skating improves balance, leg strength, and coordination. Experts recommend 30 minutes of practice three times a week to gain steady improvement.
Detective work:
- Genre: Informational, maybe sports advice
- Clues: facts, recommendations, experts → inform (and maybe persuade a little)
Answer: The author’s purpose is mainly to inform (with a minor persuasive push).
Practice Task (2 minutes)
Read this short line and decide: inform, persuade, or entertain?
- "Register now for the free robotics workshop — seats are limited!"
Think: who, what, why? (Answer below)
Answer: Persuade. It tells you to take action and uses urgency.
How Purpose Connects to Theme and Message
You already practiced pulling themes out of stories. Now, ask: Why did the author want to share this theme? If a story’s theme is about kindness, the author’s purpose might be to entertain with a heartwarming tale, or to persuade readers to be kinder, or to inform about social rules. Always link purpose to the message — it explains the author’s angle.
Prompt to try in class: "Pick a story you found a theme in earlier. What was the author’s purpose? Does the tone or level of formality change how the theme was presented?"
Final Checklist Before You Answer (On Tests or Classwork)
- Title/genre matched? ✔
- Tone and formality noted? ✔
- Facts vs opinions vs sensory details? ✔
- Which of the three purposes fits best? ✔
- Could the text be mixed-purpose? (Then pick the main one) ✔
Key Takeaways (Short and Sticky)
- Author’s purpose = the main reason the author wrote the text.
- The three basic purposes: Inform, Persuade, Entertain.
- Use genre, clues, tone, and evidence type to decide.
- Link purpose to theme — purpose explains why a message appears the way it does.
Parting idea: when you read like a detective, authors stop feeling mysterious and start feeling deliberate. That means you’re in charge of understanding — not guessing.
Tags: grade-6, beginner, reading-comprehension, humorous
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