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Supporting an inference with logical reasoning and evidence | Reading | Khan Academy

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    - [Instructor] Hello readers.
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    Let's play detective, shall we?
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    My mama always told me not
    to jump to conclusions,
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    but that's essentially what
    the skill of inference is.
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    It's not really a guess.
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    It's combining what you already know
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    with what's in front of you
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    and drawing conclusions from there.
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    It's filling in the gaps.
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    So look, I can look at
    this shape with gaps in it,
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    and based on what the shape suggest
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    and based on what I already know,
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    I can say I'm pretty
    sure that's an elephant.
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    When I do that, I'm making an inference.
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    That's what we're gonna
    talk about in this video.
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    Not just making an inference,
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    but going back and supporting
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    that inference with evidence.
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    This is an essential skill.
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    Knowing how to read between the lines
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    can help you make sense of
    what's missing in a text,
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    of what's being left unsaid,
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    or maybe even to figure
    out if someone is lying.
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    Let me set up an example, a
    little locked room mystery.
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    There was a mouse hole
    in the wall of a kitchen.
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    There is a heavy glass jar
    full of lovingly baked cookies
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    with a heavy glass lid still on the jar.
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    An hour ago, there were
    a dozen cookies in there,
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    and now there are only six.
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    From the jar across the floor
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    to the mouse hole in the wall,
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    there is a trail of cookie crumbs.
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    The question readers is, therefore,
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    who took the cookies?
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    The answer is not a mouse.
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    A mouse did not take the cookies.
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    It's a things to set up.
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    It's a frame job.
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    How do I know that?
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    The lid.
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    Based on my background
    knowledge about mice,
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    I don't think a mouse
    would've been able to lift
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    and replace the heavy
    glass lid of the jar.
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    Maybe if we knew a person
    had left the lid off the jar,
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    the mouse would still be a suspect.
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    But I can infer from the evidence I see
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    and my background knowledge
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    that someone else took six cookies
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    and left it incriminating
    cookie crumb trail
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    that led to the doorstep
    of an innocent mouse.
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    And when I am defending
    this mouse in court,
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    I will point to the lid as evidence
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    in support of my inference.
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    Let's do this again.
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    But I'll give you a chunk of text
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    to look at and then you'll get the chance
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    to make your own inferences.
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    Here is the first introduction
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    of Agatha Christie's fictional
    detective Hercule Poirot.
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    The narrator describes Poirot.
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    Poirot was an extraordinary
    looking little man.
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    He was hardly more than
    five feet, four inches,
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    but carried himself with a great dignity.
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    His head was exactly the shape of an egg,
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    and he always perched
    it a little on one side.
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    His mustache was very stiff and military.
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    The neatness of his attire
    was almost incredible.
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    I believe the speck of
    dust would've caused him
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    more pain than a bullet wound.
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    Yet, as a detective, his
    flare had been extraordinary,
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    and he had achieved
    triumphs by unraveling some
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    of the most baffling cases of the day.
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    And for you, I have a
    question now, readers.
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    Based on this description,
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    what personality traits
    do you think Poirot
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    has that make him good
    at solving mysteries?
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    I'll put on some music,
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    or you can take this time to
    pause the video and discuss.
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    We'll meet back here and I'll show you
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    how to answer this question
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    by making some informed inferences.
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    (upbeat music)
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    Okay, let's go through it.
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    So what traits does
    Poirot have that make him
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    good at solving mysteries?
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    I think the words I'd
    use to describe Poirot
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    are fussy or detail-oriented.
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    How do I know that?
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    Let's go to the text.
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    He carries himself with great dignity.
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    He's proud of his appearance.
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    He has this stiff little mustache.
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    "The neatness of his attire
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    was almost incredible."
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    That is to say, literally
    incredible, unbelievable.
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    His clothes were so neat, unbelievably so
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    to the point where a speck of dust
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    would hurt him like a bullet hurt someone.
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    All those details lead me to conclude
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    that he notices little things.
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    You have to notice the little things
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    if you're going to keep yourself so neat.
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    So exquisitely tidy and free of dust,
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    a spectacular attention to detail.
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    I can infer that that's
    the personality trait
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    that leads him to notice things
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    other people wouldn't notice,
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    and makes him such a great detective.
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    As you read, it's
    important to keep checking
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    for text evidence that supports
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    or discredits your initial inferences.
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    Sometimes they'll be
    wrong, sometimes right.
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    But usually the rest of the text
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    will help you determine that.
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    Now, do I suspect that
    you or I or any of us
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    are likely to become
    mystery solving sleuths?
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    Well, yes, actually I do.
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    I just think it'll be through the skill
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    of inference in your reading practice
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    and not through solving murders.
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    Though from the evidence presented,
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    I wouldn't rule out that possibility.
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    You can learn anything, David, out.
Title:
Supporting an inference with logical reasoning and evidence | Reading | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
05:00

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