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Mentor Text - Personal Profile/Interview


As you create your x-page for our next group of mentor texts, you'll want to carefully read and research your assigned mentor text. (What's mentor text? Find out more here: https://lead.nwp.org/knowledgebase/reading-writing-and-mentor-texts-imagining-possibilities-nwp-radio/ )


Read/watch/listen through your text and create an x-page in your notebook. These first impressions may lead you to important questions and insights later.


Do some Google research about the publisher/author/text/genre or some other element of your text. You might even just Google a question you have about the text.


Read the text again with these questions, and your own questions, in mind:

  • Try your best to categorize the text. What genres could it belong to and border? What are some similar texts you are familiar with?

  • What kind of vibe do you get from the text?

  • Do you think you are part of the intended audience for this text? Who might this text bring in? Who might it keep out?

  • What is the text doing? What might readers take away from the text?

  • What occasion might have prompted the text?

  • Who is the speaker of the text? How is this speaker similar to but different from the author?

  • What is the text about? How would you summarize it in just a sentence or two?

  • What nuances, complications, problems, insights, connections are emerging for you? What important message is surfacing?




O: Stephen A Smith Won’t Stop Talking by Vinson Cunningham

P: Above and Beyoncé by Lisa Robinson



Elaine Welteroth, Teen Vogue’s Refashionista - The New York Times
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