In this engaging Language Arts lesson set in the fictional village of "Informatown," students learn how to analyze and categorize different types of informative non-fiction texts. The video begins by reviewing the general characteristics of informative writing—logical structure, objective central ideas, and precise language—before diving into three specific text structures: Descriptive, Comparative, and Procedural. Through the narrative of organizing a messy library, the host guides viewers in examining three distinct sample texts about Nigerian culture, the Dominican Republic, and Lakota Dreamcatchers. Students learn to identify specific structural clues and transition words that distinguish one text type from another, such as looking for sensory details in descriptive texts, contrasting words in comparative texts, and chronological steps in procedural texts. This video is highly valuable for upper elementary and middle school classrooms as it moves beyond simple reading comprehension to structural analysis. It provides concrete strategies for recognizing how authors organize information to achieve specific purposes. Teachers can use this video to introduce a unit on non-fiction text structures, support lessons on transition words, or as a model for students' own informative writing projects.