Television Reading Comprehension Passage - Cored Ed Encyclopedia
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About This Product
This television reading comprehension includes:
Visualization (on the front cover)
Start your lesson by taking a minute to think and share something about the topic.
Read the script aloud (slowly), perhaps prepare some music or sound effects. Student close their eyes and let their imaginations wander.
Students open their eyes, read the question aloud and give them a few minutes to complete. Ask a few students to share or keep answers until the end to compare with what they learn in the passage.
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Download links and encyclopedia index available here.
Pre-Reading Trivia
Students will write down one thing they already know about the subject and then read five more facts and discuss. These facts are fun, and the students will enjoy learning about the subject before reading more.
Give 1 minute for students to write what they already know (no pressure—best guess is fine).
Read the five facts together. After each fact, do ask a student for their opinion, was it surprising?
Set a purpose by asking students to highlight/underline one fact they want to learn more about during the reading.
Reading Passage
The text is a high-interest reading passage with set paragraphs, roughly three to four paragraphs long. It contains a variety of themes about the topic, anywhere from history to technology. The passage is between 250 and 350 words in length.
First, ask students to look at the headings and see what they’ll learn about today. What do they know about the topic/heading?
First read options:
Teacher read-aloud (best for support).
Partner reading (paragraph by paragraph).
While reading, students underline important details, and vocabulary words they think may come up in the questions section.
Mixed Questions
The first question page contains four multiple-choice questions, each with a choice of four answers, and three written response questions that require a sentence or two from the student.
Students complete the mcqs first independently, then review quickly as a class.
For the 3 written responses, try to get students giving the answer with some form of evidence:
“I think ___ because the text says ___.”
If students get stuck, send them back to check the passage.
Vocabulary Questions
Practice seven key words from the text in this section across two activities. First section is scrambled words where students will unscramble three words given a clue for each. The second section is a word to meaning matching activity.
Before starting, have some students read out words they underlined in the passage. Ask students to say the word and read aloud the sentence(s) around each word.
Ask students to do scrambled words and the matching exercise in pairs then go through answers as a class.
For the scrambled spelling task, get four pairs to come up to the board and write the words for extra practice with the other student reading out the clue.
For the matching task, prompt students to give full sentences: “I matched ___ with ___ because ___.”
Creative Writing
In this question, the student will be required to write a five to eight sentence paragraph on a question related to the topic.
Before starting, ask students write down 3 key ideas they are going to include in their piece. Ask students for ideas to share around the class to help those struggling.
Pro writing expectations:
5–8 sentences
At least 2 facts or details from the passage
At least 2 vocabulary words from the previous page
Students read their paragraphs while classmates listen for facts and vocabulary words.
Extension Activities
This page is optional for fast finishers or to take home. There are several activities, each one requiring a different skill. Do some, do none, do all, completely optional - but you will feel reassured knowing every possibility is planned for. Includes summary writting question.
Answer Key
There are answers for the multiple-choice questions, written response questions have sample answers, vocabulary answers and if there is a summary question then a sample summary will be provided as well.
Lesson Plan Included
Customized lesson plan for this lesson is included.
Lesson Snapshot
Title: Television
Genre: Nonfiction (informational text)
Subject: Science (Technology)
Primary Topic: How television changed from mechanical to digital
Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): S
What This Lesson Teaches Best
How an invention changed over time, from a “spinning disk” experiment to modern screens and signals.
Key milestones in television’s development (1925 Selfridges demo, 1927 Farnsworth, 1936 BBC service, late 2000s flat-panels).
How pictures can be broken into lines/signals and sent by wire, radio, antenna, cable, or internet.
The shift from black-and-white to color broadcasts and how viewers experienced that change over decades.
Comparing analog and digital signals as two different ways information travels.
Learning Goals
Students will describe how early television used a spinning Nipkow disk to scan pictures into lines.
Students will identify key people, places, and dates from the passage (Baird, Farnsworth, Selfridges, Alexandra Palace).
Students will explain how television changed from mechanical parts to all-electronic systems that made clearer pictures.
Students will summarize how TV viewing changed from bulky cathode-ray tubes to flat-panel screens and high-definition images.
Students will compare analog and digital signals using details from the text.
Key Vocabulary From the Text
scan — break a picture into lines to send it.
signals — messages that carry picture or sound information.
broadcasting — sending TV so many people can receive it.
analog — a smooth, continuous wave way of sending.
digital — coded bits that travel more cleanly.





