2. When you draw a conclusion you
2 things:
use
What you know in your head.
and
What you’ve read in the story.
A conclusion is the decision you come
to when you put these two together.
3. I sleep in a crib.
I know babies sleep in cribs.
I know babies drink bottles.
I drink from a bottle.
I cannot walk or talk.
Who am I?
I know babies can’t do
these things yet.
Must be a baby!
4. Put me on your feet.
I know you wear socks and
shoes on your feet.
I will keep you
Both of these keep you
warm and dry. warm, but only shoes keep
you dry.
Wear me when it rains.
What do you wear, on your
feet, when it rains?
5. You need me before you can mail a
letter. Paste me on an envelope.
a
need
You
n
an, a a
postm , and
pe
nvelo o mail a
e
t
tamp ter!
s
let
What am I?
Only one of these
would be pasted
onto an envelope!
What did you know in
your head?
6. I am white. You need me every
day. You drink me when you are
thirsty. I can make a moustache.
Lots of things are
white!
What am I?
What is white and you drink?
You need a
lot of things.
AND, It makes a
moustache!
What did you know in
your head?
7. What looks
like a baby?
I look like a baby.
Dolls? Pictures?
Hmm…
You can give me a name.
Children like to play with me.
You can name
dolls, not pictures.
What am I?
Children play
with dolls, not
pictures.
What did you know in
your head?
8. I grow on an ear. Cook me in hot
oil. I will puff up and taste good.
Some people microwave me.
What grows on an
ear? Ear wax?
Earrings? Corn??
What am I?
You wouldn’t cook
or taste ear wax
or earrings.
I know corn will puff up and it is
sometimes cooked in the microwave.
What did you know in
your head?