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- [David] Hello readers.
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Today I'm in this peaceful forest
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to tell you all about the skill
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of figuring out the main idea of a text.
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- [Squirrel] Say, what's the big idea?
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- [David] Yes, exactly.
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Wait, what?
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Oh, hello squirrel.
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- [Squirrel] You heard me, big legs.
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What's the big idea?
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Were you tromping all
over my patch of forest
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without so much as a how do you do?
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- [David] I'm sorry.
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How do you do?
- Hello.
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- [David] How can I make it up to you?
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- [Squirrel] Well, okay.
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I'm working on a school assignment.
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- [David] Squirrels have school?
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- Yeah.
- All right, all right.
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Sorry, go on.
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- [Squirrel] So I've got
this newspaper article,
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and Mr. Badgerton says I have to draw out
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what the main idea is.
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How is that different from a summary?
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- [David] Okay, a summary is all of
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the key details of an article or a story,
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but a main idea is bigger than details.
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It's what those details add up to.
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A main idea is the key information
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that the author wants you to know
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after you've finished reading the text.
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So, for example, what's
going on in your article?
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- [Squirrel] It's about
the creek in the forest,
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and how everyone wants to drink from it,
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but the otters wanna swim in
it, the bears wanna fish in it,
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and the beavers wanna build a dam in it
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and turn the whole thing into a pond.
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- [David] Not as peaceful of a forest
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as I thought, huh?
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- [Squirrel] Not so much, no.
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- [David] What you just told me
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is a summary of the
events of the news story.
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But the big idea there is that
there's a conflict or fight
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over who has access to the creek.
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- [Squirrel] So you just zipped
all the supporting details
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out of my summary, and made
it more about the ideas?
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- [David] Yeah, exactly.
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The main idea is that different
animals wanna use the creek.
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- [Squirrel] Can you give me
a more complicated example?
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- [David] I would love to.
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Why don't we take a look at
this text about brain growth?
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So here's a passage about
training your brain.
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I'm going to read it,
I'm gonna make notes,
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and then I'm gonna
summarize each paragraph.
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And then, I'll take all those summaries,
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put 'em together, and that'll help us
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come up with a main idea.
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So, here we go.
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Your brain gets stronger
when you exercise it,
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just like muscles get stronger
when you exercise them.
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Training your brain isn't
always easy or comfortable.
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In fact, your brain uses up 20%
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of the oxygen and blood in your body
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because it works so hard.
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Okay, so, your brain can get
stronger, but it's not easy.
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Here are some examples
of how your brain grows
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when you learn new things.
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Learning math strengthens
the parts of the brain
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that are linked to memory,
thought, and action.
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Imagine that!
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Remember when you first learned
how to add and subtract?
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You got faster and faster
with more practice.
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That's because your neurons,
those are brain cells,
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your neurons were learning
how to work with each other,
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and then your memory improved.
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But memory is useful
for more than just math.
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I'm gonna underline more than just math.
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That same part of your brain
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helps you remember basketball
plays, dance routines,
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and even nice memories with
your friends and family.
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So it's not just about math.
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Learning and practicing things
helps your brain work faster.
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Learning or practicing
anything, yes anything!
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Learning and practicing helps strengthen
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and change our brains.
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Your brain is changing and
creating new neural pathways,
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which is just another way of saying
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brain connections, right?
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Neural is similar to neuron.
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So it's like, having
to do with brain cells.
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Your brain is changing and
creating new neural pathways
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when you struggle to learn something new.
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So struggle is important.
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In other words, there's a
lot happening in your brain
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when you're learning.
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All learning can build
new information pathways,
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but learning things that
are challenging for you
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can supercharge your brain growth.
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In other words, the
more you're challenged,
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the faster you learn.
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So here are my paragraph summaries.
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Your brain can get
stronger, but it's not easy.
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Learning and practicing
helps your brain work faster.
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And the more you're challenged,
the faster you learn.
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Putting those three things together,
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I would say that the
main idea of this passage
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is that learning new information
can strengthen your brain.
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Let's get our little
thinky pinky back in there.
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What I did was I took
something from each paragraph
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and found what they all had in common.
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There were some details, for example,
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about math or dance
practice, that are important,
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but aren't so important
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that they need to be
included in the main idea.
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All of that can just sort of be pushed
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into this broader idea of
learning new information
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makes your brain stronger,
can strengthen your brain.
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- [Squirrel] So how should I
be thinking about main ideas?
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- [David] All right.
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So, are you familiar with the expression,
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"You can't see the forest for the trees"?
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- [Squirrel] David, I live in a forest.
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Of course I'm familiar.
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- [David] So it means, right,
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don't get so hung up on details
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that you can't see the big picture.
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The trees, one by one, are
all part of the forest.
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They make up the forest.
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Right, you with me?
- Yes.
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- [David] A summary of the forest
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is all the important details.
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There's a stream here,
there's a birch tree here,
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a Douglas fir tree here, a red
oak tree here, a rock there.
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But the main idea is this is a forest.
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All of those things together
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add up to the idea of a forest.
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- [Squirrel] But do they add up
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to you doing my homework assignment?
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- [David] They do not.
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- [Squirrel] Aw, nuts.
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- [David] You can learn anything.
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David, out.