In Part One of Comprehension Strategies (Making Meaning of Texts), we discussed the importance of knowing the basics like decoding (knowing our sound patterns, sight words, and the ability to figure out unknown words) and developing concepts of print (knowing how to use pictures to help decode, using pictures to support understanding, looking at the cover and title, knowing which way to turn the pages, etc.), but also the importance of comprehension (our ability to make meaning from a text). In Part Two, we’re going to dive a little deeper into the specific skills and strategies we often look for when building comprehension abilities:
Comprehension Ability | Questions to Ask About Content | What it Looks Like in Practice |
Summarizing |
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**Note: Summarizing is NOT listing every single thing that happened in the story. |
Making Connections |
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“This makes me think of/reminds me of….. because…..” |
Making Predictions |
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Asking Questions |
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Visualizing |
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Accessing Schema |
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Inferencing |
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Synthesizing |
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All of these skills are important for becoming a proficient reader. Each one of them supports a reader’s ability to develop the others, and they are what teachers are most often looking for. Ultimately, what we want is for readers to become critical thinkers – to be able to take in information, comprehend it, manipulate the ideas so it either adds to their existing understandings/beliefs about the world or changes it somehow, and then output their understanding in an effective way.
Therefore, in addition to being able to answer your questions, the most important part of this is that they explain why they think that, or how they know, and they need to accurately use evidence from the text. Even our early readers need to be able to tell us that the character is happy because they have a smile on their face, or that the dog loves the character because his tail is wagging. The word, ‘because’, needs to become your new best friend if you’re working with a reader who is struggling with comprehension.
Overall, keep up the great work on your young reader’s decoding abilities, but don’t forget about comprehension. Just make sure you stick to the following: read consistently (ideally every day!), know your letter sounds and sound patterns, use the pictures, and just talk about what you’re reading. It might even be fun!
Happy reading!