This document provides information about reading everyday texts. It discusses the different types of everyday texts that students encounter, including essays, articles, editorials, letters, journals, biographies, autobiographies, speeches, books, how-to articles, recipes, directions, charts, graphs and tables. It notes some common challenges students face with everyday texts, such as lack of interest, experience or prior knowledge. It also discusses the main purposes and structures of everyday texts, including descriptive, enumerative, sequential, comparative, causal and timelines. The document provides examples of each text structure and suggests tools for creating timelines.