app=InqScribe cache.mediaend=00:14:05;01 cache.mediastart=00:00:00;00 file.data=d2lu TDpcRWxhaW5lX1NtaXRoX1dQVF8gVm9sdW50ZWVyXFN0b3J5bG9yZHNfMDZfY292ZS5tcDQ\e APHRcwEAAgAAAAAWU3Rvcnlsb3Jkc18wNl9jb3ZlLm1wNAEAAAAANUw6XEVsYWluZV9TbWl0aF9XUFRfIFZvbHVudGVlclxTdG9yeWxvcmRzXzA2X2NvdmUubXA0AwAAAAABAAQAAAAAAQAAAAAAAAA\e U3Rvcnlsb3Jkc18wNl9jb3ZlLm1wNA\e\e file.description= file.embedded_tc=1 file.start=00:00:00;00 font.name= font.size=12 offline.description= offline.end=01:00:00;00 offline.start=00:00:00;00 offline.timermethod=none offline.title=Untitled print.bottom=1. print.left=1. print.right=1. print.top=1. print.units=1 state.aspectratio=0. state.leftcolwidth=960 state.mediaheight=720 state.mediawidth=960 state.windowpos=43,95,1344,800 tc.format=[x] tc.includesourcename=0 tc.omitframes=0 tc.unbracketed=0 text=Storylords 06\r\rShh!\rHuh?\rCan't you read?\r\r \r\rHi, Norby.\rHi, mandy.\r\rWhat are you doing?\rWhat does it look like?\rIt looks like you're eating all the cookies.\rWill you help me with my homework?\rWhat do I have to do?\rJust ask me these questions.\rOk.\r"where is the statue of liberty located?"\rThat's a "right there" question.\rWhat's that?\rIt's what we're studying in reading class right now.\rThere are three types of questions.\rSome have answers right on the page,\rSome you've got to search for,\rAnd some you've got to figure out.\rYou asked a "right there" question.\r"new york city's statue of liberty\rIs a beacon of freedom."\rWhat's a beacon?\rLook it up.\rHey!\rThe ring!\r\rMy children, hurry to the land of Mojuste.\rThorzuul is once again\rUnleashing his despicable tyranny.\r\rHe's being mean and nasty.\rHurry, my children!\rLet's go!\rBut your homework.\rI'll do it later.\r\rWait up!\r\r"thunder and lightning,\r"trumpets and drums,\rReaders rejoice, a storylord comes!"\r\rWho are you?\rI'm Norbert niesenden.\rI'm mandy niesenden.\rWe're apprentice storylords,\rAt your service.\rI'm minnie gwynn. Call me min.\rI'm winifred gwynn. Call me win.\rWe're min and win, the gwynn twins!\rCan we help you?\rI don't need help.\rNeither do i.\rYou don't?\rWay to go, Norby.\rYou were in the magic picture!\rMaybe they have a sister.\rYes. Her name's lynn.\rShe's not in.\rI guess we'd better be off.\rSorry to have bothered you.\rCould I speak to you in private?\rYes.\rI was going to ask you the same thing.\r\rMy sister shouldn't know about this.\rIt would upset her.\r"dear min, I have a red summer cape\r"and a blue winter cape.\rWhich one should I wear?" signed, "Thorzuul."\rThere's no way to answer this question.\rBut if I don't, Thorzuul will turn--\rI know... Turn you to stone.\r"dear win, it snowed last night.\r"what color cape should I wear outside?"\rSigned, "Thorzuul."\rIf my sister knew, she'd be very upset.\rHow can I answer this question?\rDon't worry about it.\rWe can take care of this.\rNorby!\r\rDidn't you have a reading class\rOn how to answer questions?\rMrs. Framish said there are three ways\rTo find answers to questions on what you're reading.\r\rToday we'll learn about\rWays to find answers to questions.\rI want you to read what's on the board.\rDon't read out loud.\r\rIs everyone finished?\rGood.\rWho can me tell what present meagan got for christmas?\rJason?\rShe got new mittens.\rIs that what everyone thinks?\rRead the part that proves you're right.\r"meagan got new mittens for christmas."\rGood for you, Jason.\rYou found a sentence that tells us\rWhat meagan got for christmas.\rMany times we find the answers to questions\rRight in one sentence.\rWe have a special name for those questions.\rWe call them "right there" questions.\r\rIf you forget the answer\rTo a right there question,\rJust reread the sentence,\rAnd you'll find the answer\rRight there on the page.\rI have another question for you.\r\rWhat did meagan's mittens feel like inside?\rNorbert?\rThey felt furry.\rHow did you get that answer?\rI don't see a sentence that says that.\rWell, I put two sentences together.\rShe got the mittens. They had fur inside.\rSo they felt furry.\rYou're a good reader, Norbert.\rYou didn't find the answer in one sentence,\rSo you put the ideas\rFrom two sentences together\rAnd thought about it.\rWe call those questions\r"think and search" questions.\r\rYou have to think about what you read\rAnd search carefully for ideas to use\rIn making up your answer.\rNow here's a hard one.\rWhat do you think the weather is like\rWhen meagan wears her mittens to school?\r\rAngie.\rWet and rainy?\rJason?\rI think it's cold outside.\rHow did you get that answer, Jason?\rThe mittens have fur, so they must be warm.\rIf you wore them in the rain, your hands would get hot.\rIf it was cold out, you'd wear warm mittens.\rVery good, Jason.\rYou didn't find the answer\rIn any of the sentences,\rSo you put together\rWhat you read and what you know\rTo get your answer.\rWe call those kinds of questions\r"on your own" questions.\r\rLet's look at these three kinds of questions.\rWho can tell me how you find an answer\rTo a "right there" question?\rNorbert?\rFind the sentence with the answer.\rGood.\rHow about a "think and search" question?\r\rAngie?\rThe answer isn't in one sentence,\rSo you put different ideas\rFrom different sentences together.\rGood.\rWhat about an "on your own" question?\rJason?\rYou have to think about\rWhat you read and what you know to get an answer.\rVery good, everyone.\rBefore you try to answer any question,\rThink about what type of question it is.\rThinking about what type of question you have to answer\rWill help you figure out the answer better.\rLet's get our reading books...\r...will help you figure out the answer.\rWell, here's my question.\rYou, too?\rHere's mine.\rHe asked the same question.\r"what color cape should I wear?"\rWe have to figure out what type of question it is.\rIt's not a "right there" question.\rWhen you read each sentence,\rYou don't find an answer.\rTry "think and search."\rHe wears a red cape in summer and blue in winter.\rAnd "it snowed last night."\rIf it snowed, it must be winter.\r\rThe blue cape!\rI have just the thing!\r\rI think you-know-who just arrived.\r\rAnnouncing,\rHis royal badness,\rThe one and only,\rThe master of disaster,\rThe prince of panic,\rThe hardest working storylord in Mojuste--\rMilkbreath!\rSorry, boss.\rThorzuul!\r\rAha.\r\rWell?\rYou're in luck.\rWe have one just your size->>extra large!\rWould you like matching earmuffs and mittens\rFor those cold, wintry days?\r\rYou answered my question.\rIt's impossible!\rNot when you know what type of question it is.\rA "right there" question,\rA "think and search" question,\rAn "on your own" question.\rYours was a "think and search" question.\rYou two...again!\rI think we'd better be going.\rDon't forget to show him the matching scarf.\rHome.\r\rAhh.\r\rI think we have color-coordinated dickies, too.\rMilkbreath, get me out of here!\r\rWould you have one of those outfits\rWith purple polka dots?\r\rMilkbreath!\r\rCaptioning is made possible by wisconsin educational radio & television network\rCaptioning performed by the national captioning institute, inc.\rCaptions copyright 1986 wisconsin educational radio & television network\rPublic performance of captions prohibited without permission of national captioning institute\r\r\r timecode.fps=-29 type=file url= url.description= url.embedded_tc=1 url.start=00:00:00;00 version=1.1 warned.fpsconflict=0