English, 06.11.2020 22:30, Jonahrosario03
Please help so majer One of the central ideas of Written in Bone is that forensic anthropology helps us to answer many mysteries of the past, but it can also create more questions to answer.
How does Walker develop this central idea in the text?
Use the Claim-Evidence-Reasoning paragraph structure and include direct text evidence to support your claim.
Claim-Evidence-Reasoning Paragraph Frame
Question to Prompt My Thinking
Sentence Frame
Claim
What do I know, based on the text?
What is my response to the question?
Flip the question into a statement.
Evidence
How do I know this?
What in the text tells me this?
In the text it says, “.”
For example, .
Reasoning
Why does the evidence support the claim?
This shows that .
This means that .
From this, I can conclude
Model
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 17:40, joneswilliam141236
Apply the idea of the plain language movement to make the paragraph under “before” in section 1 more user-friendly
Answers: 2
English, 21.06.2019 18:20, jayc36809
Read the following passage: sari couldn't believe her bad luck. she had locked her keys in the car. to add fuel to the fire, her cell phone was in the locked car, and she was late for a very important meeting. she knocked on her neighbor's door so that she could ask to use his phone, but he was not not home. what was she to do? what role does the idiom in the passage serve? a. it shows that sari has incredibly bad luck when it comes to work. b. it shows that sari's neighbor was not home either. c. it shows that sari locked her keys in the car. d. it shows that sari's situation was worse than it seemed at first.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 01:40, limelight11
Which quotation best supports the authors’ claim and purpose?
Answers: 1
Please help so majer One of the central ideas of Written in Bone is that forensic anthropology helps...
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