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Grade 6 English
Chapters

1Main Idea and Summarizing Skills

2Theme and Message in Literature

3Author’s Purpose, Tone, and Formality

4Point of View and Perspective

5Text Structure in Informational Texts

6Literary Devices and Figurative Language

7Analyzing Short Stories

8Analyzing Informational Texts and Arguments

9Comparing Texts and Visual Elements

Compare a Short Story and an ArticleContrast Poetic and Expository StylesHow Illustrations Change a Story’s MeaningAnalyzing Photographs That Accompany ArticlesComparing Historical Texts and Modern ReportsMatching Visuals to Textual PurposeReading Charts and Graphs for Key PointsPractice: Writing a Compare-and-Contrast ParagraphHow Captions and Labels Guide ReadingMini Task: Create a Visual to Support a Text

10Organizing Writing and Using Transitions

11Developing Arguments and Supporting Claims

12Creative Writing Techniques

13Editing, Revising, and Correcting Errors

14Research Skills and Responsible Use

15Vocabulary Building: Affixes, Roots, and Context

Courses/Grade 6 English /Comparing Texts and Visual Elements

Comparing Texts and Visual Elements

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Compare texts across genres and analyze how illustrations, photographs, and graphics contribute to meaning and historical understanding.

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Compare a Short Story and an Article

How to Compare a Short Story and an Article (Grade 6 Guide)
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grade 6
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English
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How to Compare a Short Story and an Article (Grade 6 Guide)

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Compare a Short Story and an Article — Grade 6 Guide

"Comparing a story and an article is like lining up a comic-book hero next to a news anchor — both wear compelling hats, but they work very different jobs."

You've already practiced tracing arguments, annotating editorials, and filling an evidence chart. Nice work — that detective training is exactly what you'll lean on now. In this lesson you'll use those skills to compare a short story (fiction) and an article (nonfiction) — paying close attention to textual and visual elements so your comparison is clear, fair, and interesting.


Why compare a short story and an article?

  • Purpose practice: Authors choose words and images for different jobs. Comparing shows how purpose changes everything.
  • Critical thinking: You’ll use evidence to explain why two texts feel different and how they persuade readers.
  • Visual literacy: Pictures, captions, and layout are arguments too. You’ll spot how visuals support the text.

This builds on your previous work: instead of only finding claims and evidence in nonfiction, now you’ll contrast how those claims or themes are built in fiction vs. nonfiction and how visuals help each.


Quick checklist: What to look for (at a glance)

  1. Purpose & Audience — Why was this written? Who should read it?
  2. Structure — Plot vs. facts, paragraphs vs. sections, headlines.
  3. Language & Tone — Emotional, descriptive, or objective and factual?
  4. Evidence & Details — Invented scenes vs. documented facts or quotes.
  5. Visuals — Photos, illustrations, captions, charts, layout choices.
  6. Credibility & Author’s Role — Reporter/experts vs. storyteller/creator.
  7. Theme vs. Claim — What idea is the text pushing or exploring?

Step-by-step method: Compare like a pro (or a very curious squirrel)

1) Note purpose and audience quickly

  • Short story: often to entertain or explore a truth through characters.
  • Article: usually to inform, explain, or persuade using facts and sources.

Ask: Which text wants to make me feel something? Which wants me to know something?

2) Look at structure and look for anchors

  • Short story: characters, setting, rising action, climax, resolution.
  • Article: headline, lead (lede), body with facts and quotes, sometimes a conclusion.

Micro explanation: The story’s structure moves you emotionally; the article’s structure moves you intellectually.

3) Collect textual evidence (use your evidence chart habit)

Use the evidence chart you made earlier, but tweak it: add columns for Textual Evidence and Visual Evidence for each text.

Example mini-chart (markdown table):

Element Short Story — Evidence Article — Evidence
Purpose Paragraph 3: descriptive scene about the storm Headline + first paragraph: warnings and stats
Tone "Her hands shook with wonder…" (emotional) "According to the report…" (neutral/authoritative)
Key detail Dialogue revealing character fear Expert quote + data chart
Visuals Illustration of house in rain (mood) Photo of flooded street + caption (proof)

Pro tip: When you annotate, write WHY each piece of evidence matters — not just what it is.

4) Inspect the visuals like a detective

  • Ask about choice and function: Is the picture decorative, mood-setting, or evidence?
  • For articles: photos, graphs, captions often add credibility and facts.
  • For stories: illustrations or cover art usually add mood or symbolism.

Questions to ask:

  • Does the image prove something or just create feeling?
  • How does the caption shape our reading?
  • If there’s a chart, what claim does it support?

5) Compare language and tone side-by-side

  • Quote one sentence from each text and ask: Which words tell me the author’s goal?
  • Fiction will use sensory verbs and adjectives; nonfiction will use dates, names, numbers.

6) Decide on credibility and authorship

  • Article: check for named sources, statistics, expert quotes — these increase trust.
  • Story: authors build credibility through believable characters and consistent details, but not through citations.

7) Synthesize: write a neutral comparison (remember your neutral-summarizing skill)

  • Begin with a sentence that states both texts and their purposes.
  • Use evidence: short quotes paired with visual notes.
  • End with how their different choices change your understanding.

Example neutral opener:
"The short story explores how one family responds to a storm through sensory scenes and character thoughts, while the article reports on the same storm’s causes and effects, using expert quotes and a map to explain damage."


Short practice: compare this way for 10 minutes

Pick a short story and an article about the same topic (like school lunches, a local flood, or a community garden).

Write a quick evidence chart with three rows: Purpose, Tone, Visuals. Fill each row with 1–2 pieces of evidence from each text. Then write one short paragraph (3–4 sentences) comparing them neutrally.


Rubric (quick): How teachers might grade your comparison

  • Clear statement of each text’s purpose and audience — 2 points
  • At least 3 pieces of evidence (textual + visual) correctly cited — 3 points
  • Neutral, balanced synthesis that explains how choices create different effects — 3 points
  • Correct use of evidence chart/annotations — 2 points

Total: 10 points


Key takeaways — pocket-sized wisdom

  • Purpose guides everything. Fiction moves feelings; articles move facts.
  • Visuals have jobs. Photos and charts usually prove or inform; illustrations usually suggest or mood-set.
  • Bring evidence. Use your evidence chart habit: two texts + two kinds of evidence = strong comparison.

"If a picture is worth a thousand words, then understanding why it’s there is worth a thousand grades." — probably true.

Go compare — armed with your evidence chart, a skeptical eyebrow, and a sense of humor. You’ll see how different writers and designers try to steer your mind and heart — and you’ll be ready to explain exactly how (with quotes and captions to back you up). Good luck, detective-critic-story-explorer!

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