Perfectly Imperfect is the book i am talking about this link specificly.

Write a paragraph in which you analyze the text structure of the informational text. Identify the text structure. Explain how you identified it. Tell how the author’s choice of structure helped you as a reader.
make it a short pahragraph

The text structure of the book "Perfectly Imperfect" is mainly chronological. The author presents the events and experiences in a sequential order, leading the reader from one point to another in a straightforward manner. I identified the chronological structure by observing how the author begins with the introduction of characters and concepts and then moves forward over time, sharing the challenges and growth that occur. The author's choice of this structure helps me as a reader because it allows me to follow the progression of the story and understand the development of the characters and their relationships. It also helps me engage with the book more easily as I can anticipate what might happen next.

read this and tell meWrite a paragraph in which you analyze the text structure of the informational text. Identify the text structure. Explain how you identified it. Tell how the author’s choice of structure helped you as a reader.

The artist Leonardo da
Vinci, perhaps best
known for painting the
Mona Lisa, produced An Imperfect Man
is as long as what you would expect
to see in a man who is 6 feet 8 inches
tall. His legs are the length typical of
a man who is 5 feet 10 inches. Phelps
has long arms too. Like the Vitruvian
Man, most people have a wingspan
roughly the same as their height.
Phelps’ wingspan is 6 feet 7 inches,
three inches longer than his height.
His ankles are (reportedly) double
jointed, and thus extremely flexible.
And his feet are big—he wears size 14
shoes. So Phelps’ legs act like flippers
when he swims.
No one could argue that Phelps
has a perfect body in da Vinci’s
sense. But is it correct to say
it is imperfect? What does
“perfection” mean when we are
talking about human biology?
Does it even exist?
Consider Michael Phelps. The
winningest swimmer of all time,
Phelps earned 28 Olympic medals. His
body does not look like the Vitruvian
Man. In fact, Phelps’ body is quite
unusual. The best swimmers tend
to have long torsos and short legs.
Phelps is 6 feet 4 inches, but his torso
What Is Physical
Perfection?
the animal kingdom. Imagine a
population of brown rabbits and
white rabbits in a snowy field. Under
these conditions, predators are less
likely to see and catch the white
rabbits. In a summertime field—all
brown soil and green and golden
plants—white rabbits are more
visible and easier to catch. Neither
white nor brown fur is perfect for
rabbit survival. Rabbits need different
Maybe perfection has more
to do with how a body works
than how it looks. How we
function actually depends
upon how well we fit into our
environment.
Here’s an example from
T
he artist Leonardo da
Vinci, perhaps best
known for painting the
Mona Lisa, produced
a drawing called the
Vitruvian Man. In it, da Vinci
depicted his idea of the perfectly
sized and proportioned male
body. But is this really what a
perfect body looks like? And
if it’s perfect, does that make
every other type of body flawed?
Or maybe those are the wrong
questions and the idea of a
“perfect” body is actually
what’s flawed.
Do you think
we stand out?
39
Swimmer Michael mer Michael
Phelps holds the elps holds the
record for most
Olympic medals
—in any sport. any sport.
text © 2020 by Donna Bozzone
prevent people from
reproducing, though.
Amazingly, most of
us function extremely
well despite these
flaws. Some of us
function spectacularly.
People have plenty. Here are just a few
imperfections in the human body. Our
knees are less flexible than some of
our other joints, which makes injury
common. Unlike most other animals,
we cannot make vitamin C and need
to make sure we get it in our diets.
And our jaws are too small to easily
fit all our teeth, which is why wisdom
teeth usually need to be removed.
All our odd parts and functional
compromises exist because evolution
builds on what came before. Our
ancestors walked on four legs, not
two. Our knees are a compromise that
allow us to be bipedal. More recent
ancestors of humans lost the ability
to make vitamin C, but we figured
out a way to solve this problem with
a change in diet. Humans’ primate
ancestors grew bigger jaws than we
do, because they ate tougher foods.
Now our teeth are crowded. None of
these flaws are so serious that they
Variation as
an Element
of Success
Michael Phelps’
body is not perfectly
symmetrical or
balanced. His physical
variations, however,
may have given him
the raw materials to
be a close-to-perfect
swimmer. Phelps’ case is not unique;
elite athletes highlight dramatic
variability that provides them the
physical characteristics to approach
perfection in action. Usain Bolt, an
Olympic sprinter, has an abundance
of fast-twitch muscle fibers that make
him speedy and legs so long that it
takes him four to five fewer steps to
complete a 100-meter race than his
competitors.
Simone Biles, another Olympic gold
medalist, is both strong and small.
The combination is ideal for her sport
of gymnastics. She may also have a
better-than-average ability to sense
where her body is in space, perhaps
making jumps, spins, and somersaults
a tad easier than for an average person.
No athlete is born with the skills
to win gold medals, though. Those
achievements require years of effort.
Using Variation to
Your Advantage
40
bodies for different seasons. And
in fact, in some types of rabbits, fur
color changes with the seasons. Like
rabbits, all organisms, including
people, adapt to their environments.
The process of evolution selects for
the survival of organisms that thrive
in their specific environments. But
evolution isn’t engineering. Often,
imperfections that don’t affect
survival too badly get passed on
through the generations.
Odd Parts and Compromises
our survival. Human variation has
allowed us to live in wildly different
environments—the tropics, deserts,
and the Arctic—and to develop
many different physical, intellectual,
and emotional talents. Not only is
there no ideal human body, but our
species also thrives because we are
different from one another, each of us
particularly suited for our own way
of living.
How might Michael Phelps,
Usain Bolt, and Simone Biles define
perfection? Perhaps they might say
that perfection, or close to it, occurs
in peak athletic performance. Their
physical traits certainly helped them
excel at their sports. However, it was
hard work, dedication, and training
that allowed them to soar.
How do you define perfection?
Maybe something about you
seems different. Can you combine
your unique physical, mental, and
emotional skills and your attitude in
a way that works toward your version
Da Vinci’s drawing of the Vitruvian Man of perfection?
combined mathematics and art. To
da Vinci, the Vitruvian Man depicted
ideal proportions. It was his image of
the perfectly formed man. Da Vinci is a
time-honored artist, but is there really
such thing as a perfect body?
No.
In biology, there is no such thing
as one ideal body. In fact, variation in
all living things, including us, is the
rule. This variation is essential for
Donna Bozzone is a 5-foot-2 biology
professor and author of books about science.
Thanks to her height, she can fit comfortably
in small places such as the seats in an
airplane and rarely hits her head on
low-hanging things. Because she is left�handed, she would have advantages boxing,
baseball, cricket, and tennis compared to
right-handed people, if she played any of

a drawing called the
Vitruvian Man. In it, da Vinci
depicted his idea of the perfectly
sized and proportioned male
body. But is this really what a
perfect body looks like? And
if it’s perfect, does that make
every other type of body flawed?
Or maybe those are the wrong
questions and the idea of a
“perfect” body is actually
what’s flawed.

The text structure of the informational text is a combination of cause and effect and compare and contrast. The author first introduces the concept of the Vitruvian Man and questions the idea of a "perfect" body. The author then presents examples of different athletes like Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt, and Simone Biles who excel in their respective sports due to their unique physical traits. The author compares these athletes and highlights their variations from the traditional idea of a "perfect" body. The author also discusses how imperfections and adaptations in the human body have been essential for our survival and evolution. This structure helps the reader understand different perspectives on what defines a "perfect" body and challenges the notion of one ideal physique.

summerize your answer bot

The information text has a combination of cause and effect and compare and contrast structures. The author questions the idea of a "perfect" body using Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man as a starting point. The author then presents examples of athletes like Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt, and Simone Biles who excel in their sports due to their unique physical traits. The author compares them to the traditional idea of a perfect body, emphasizing their variations. The text also discusses how imperfections in the human body are actually adaptations that have helped our survival. This structure challenges the concept of a perfect body and presents different perspectives on the topic.

shorten your answer more bot

The text combines cause and effect and compare and contrast structures. It questions the notion of a "perfect" body using da Vinci's Vitruvian Man. Examples of athletes like Phelps, Bolt, and Biles are presented to highlight their unique physical traits. The text also discusses how imperfections in the human body are adaptations for survival. This challenges the idea of a perfect body and offers different perspectives.

make sure all of your answers are that short now.

Write a paragraph in which you analyze the author’s purpose and point of view. Explain how you determined the author’s point of view. Tell how thinking about the author’s purpose and point of view helped you understand the topic.

The author's purpose in the text is to challenge the notion of a "perfect" body and explore the concept of human variation. The author presents examples of athletes like Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt, and Simone Biles to demonstrate that physical traits that deviate from the traditional idea of perfection can actually contribute to excellence in their respective sports. The author's point of view is that there is no one ideal body and that variation is essential for human adaptation and success. Considering the author's purpose and point of view helped me understand that societal standards of perfection are subjective and that embracing diversity and individual strengths is more important than striving for an unattainable ideal.

a little shorter bot