1.
The cause-effect text structure informs the reader how or why an
event happened, which is referred to as the cause, and what
resulted from an event, which is referred to as the effect. For
example, a newspaper article could present a cause as “cold
temperatures in the mountains” and an effect as “heavy snowfall
conditions in the mountains.”
2. The chronology/sequence text structure informs the reader of the order of events or steps in a process. For example, a historical
document could present the sequence of events on a timeline to
show the chronology—or the order in time—of when each event
occurred.
3. The compare/contrast text structure informs the reader of how
two or more things are alike or different. For example, a political
speech could present how two presidential candidates are alike
and how they are different.
4. The description/categorization text structure informs the reader of
how something looks, moves, or possibly works; or it may inform
the reader of a definition or characterization. For example, an
instruction manual could present a description of the features on a
car and how to operate the features.
5. The problem-solution text structure informs the reader of what is
wrong and how to fix it. For example, a scientific account could
present a problem—tigers are an endangered species—and a
solution—preserving the landscape where tigers live.