4
Instructional/procedural texts
5
Non-chronological reports
6 Persuasion
texts
7 Recounts
Text type: Narrative
2 Adventure
3 Mystery
4 Science
Fiction
5 Fantasy
6 Historical
fiction
Text type: Poetry
2 Free verse
3 Visual poems
4 Structured
poems
For example: (from
UK )
Explanatory texts
Explanatory texts generally go beyond simple ‘description’ in that
they include information about causes, motives or reasons. Explanations
and reports are sometimes confused when children are asked to ‘explain’
and they actually provide a report, e.g. what they did (or what
happened) but not how and why. Although some children’s dictionaries do
include an encyclopaedia-like explanation, others are inaccurately
categorised as explanation texts when they simply define a word’s
meaning.
Like all text types, explanatory texts vary widely and are often
found combined with other text types.
Purpose:
To explain how or why, e.g. to explain the processes involved in
natural/social phenomena or to explain why something is the way it is.
A table showing core elements and aspects of explanatory
texts to support teaching and learning
| Generic structure |
Language features |
Knowledge for the writer |
 | A general statement to introduce the topic being
explained. (In the winter some animals hibernate.) |
 | The steps or phases in a process are explained
logically, in order. (When the nights get longer… because
the temperature begins to drop… so the hedgehog looks for a
safe place to hide.) |
|
 | Written in simple present tense. (Hedgehogs wake up
again in the spring.) |
 | Use of temporal connectives, e.g. first, then, after
that, finally. |
 | Use of causal connectives, e.g. so, because of this. |
|
 |
Choose a title that shows what you are explaining,
perhaps using why or how. (How do hedgehogs survive the
winter? Why does it get dark at night?) |
 |
Decide whether you need to include images or other
features to help your reader, e.g. diagrams,
photographs, a flow chart, a text box, captions, a list
or a glossary. |
 |
Use the first paragraph to introduce what you will be
explaining. |
 |
Plan the steps in your explanation and check that you
have included any necessary information about how and
why things happen as they do.
|
 |
Add a few interesting details.
|
 |
Interest the reader by talking directly to them (You’ll
be surprised to know that … Have you ever thought about
the way that …?) or by relating the subject to their own
experience at the end (So next time you see a pile of
dead leaves in the autumn …). |
 |
Re-read your explanation as if you know nothing at all
about the subject. Check that there are no gaps in the
information. |
 |
Remember that you can adapt explanatory texts or combine
them with other text types to make them work effectively
for your audience and purpose.
|
|