Distinguish fact from opinion in different media: e.g., TV ads, billboards, essays, literary non-fiction, TV commentary, editorials, political speeches, letters to the editor. See also: Computers And Technology - Media Literacy.
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Category Videos
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 5 - 8
3078 Views:
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A group of second-graders show us how good readers decipher facts and opinions while reading The Cat In The Hat by Dr. Seuss. (02:42)
May 1, 2010 at 07:31 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 10
5175 Views:
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First, the narrator reads a non-fiction passage about Beluga whales. Then, the narrator pulls sentences from the story and asks if the sentences are fact or opinion. The narrator asks two general comprehension questions. The image is a still image on...ly. Great for improving listening skills. (03:33)
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February 14, 2010 at 01:36 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 8 - 12
1663 Views:
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This is a story about how Isabelle and Esteban come up with a cool idea to solve their problem. There are no moving images in this video; it just has narration. (04:03)
May 1, 2010 at 08:02 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 6 - 10
3496 Views:
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This is a short biography about Jackie Robinson written by a second grader. The story includes many facts about Mr. Robinson and the opinions of others about black players. One slide is shown as the narrator reads the story. (1:51)
August 7, 2009 at 05:50 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 8 - 12
2773 Views:
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This is a short video with computer animation and computerized voices. The video gives one example of a fact and one example of an opinion.
May 1, 2010 at 07:22 PM
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