Comparing Texts - Parent Activity Guide

Help your child develop critical thinking skills by comparing different texts

Why Compare Texts?

Comparing texts is a crucial reading skill that helps students think more deeply about what they read. On Florida's FAST assessment, sixth graders must compare how different authors approach the same topic, analyze texts in different genres, and identify shared themes across multiple passages. This skill builds critical thinking that extends far beyond the classroom.

Key Concepts

Compare: Find similarities between texts (how they are alike)
Contrast: Find differences between texts (how they are unlike)
Genre: The category or type of text (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, etc.)
Perspective: The author's viewpoint or attitude about a topic
Theme: The central message or lesson of a text

Activities to Try at Home

📰 Same Story, Different Sources

When a current event happens, read about it from two different news sources together:

Why it works: This shows how the same event can be presented differently depending on the author and publication.

🎬 Book vs. Movie Night

Read a book together, then watch the movie adaptation:

Examples: Wonder, Holes, Percy Jackson, Harry Potter, The Giver

📚 Two Stories, One Theme

Find two stories or movies that share a theme (like courage or friendship):

🗣️ Different Genres, Same Topic

Explore how the same topic is covered in different formats:

Questions to Ask When Comparing Texts

Parent Tip: Use a Simple Framework

When comparing any two texts, use these three questions:
1. What are they both about? (Topic/Subject)
2. How are they alike? (Similarities)
3. How are they different? (Differences: genre, perspective, evidence, tone)

This simple structure works for any comparison - from news articles to novels to movies!

Everyday Comparison Opportunities

At Home

  • Compare reviews of a product before buying
  • Read two recipes for the same dish
  • Compare how two family members tell the same story
  • Look at the same topic in different encyclopedias

Online

  • Compare YouTube videos on the same topic
  • Look at different websites about the same subject
  • Read comments with different perspectives
  • Compare how different creators explain a concept

Sentence Starters to Practice

For Similarities

  • "Both texts..."
  • "Similarly, both authors..."
  • "Like Text A, Text B also..."
  • "The texts share..."

For Differences

  • "Unlike Text A, Text B..."
  • "However, they differ in..."
  • "While Text A... Text B..."
  • "On the other hand..."

Informacion para Padres (Spanish Summary)

Por que comparar textos? Comparar textos es una habilidad de lectura critica. En la evaluacion FAST de Florida, los estudiantes de sexto grado deben comparar como diferentes autores abordan el mismo tema, analizar textos de diferentes generos, e identificar temas compartidos.

Conceptos Clave:

Actividades en Casa:

Preguntas para hacer: "En que se parecen estos textos?" y "En que se diferencian?"