Text Annotation Guide
Text Annotation Guide
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Text Annotation Guide
Highlighting and annotating is a key skill for actively reading and engaging with any text—whether it’s a piece of
nonfiction, a novel, a short story, a newspaper article, or a critical reading passage. Active reading forces you to
interact with the text in a way that helps you to keep ideas organized and to identify where in the text you lose
comprehension. As you read, follow these steps for highlighting and annotating.
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5. Ask Your Own Questions
• As you are reading, you may want to know MORE about something mentioned in the text! (“Who is
Cain?”) Or, you may even DISAGREE with what the author is stating (“But what about…?”/ “How can
that be?”).
• Formulate your own questions and write them in the margins.
6. Make Connections
• As you are reading, be thinking of connections from text to text (does the reading remind you of
something else you’ve read?), text to world (does the reading remind you of something that’s happened
in the world?), and text to self (does the reading remind you of something from your life?).
• Write connection notes in the margins—“This reminds me of…”
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COMMON Annotation Symbols
? I am confused.
! I am shocked! I am surprised! Huge moment!
Such a great point!
> This reminds me of…
* This is important.
New vocabulary word
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