Reading
Comprehension Strategies
I will be teaching the following strategies to
students. Please reinforce the strategies as your child reads to you each
night.
Comprehension
Strategies
Reading
is not just pronouncing words—it requires understanding. Most experienced
readers use a variety of strategies to understand text. The following
strategies can help your child understand any text in any subject.
Make Predictions
Predictions
encourage active reading and keep students interested, whether or not the
predictions are correct. Incorrect predictions can signal a misunderstanding
that needs to be revisited. Instruct students:
-
Look at the pictures, table of contents, chapter
headings, maps, diagrams, and features. What subjects are in the book?
-
Write down predictions about the text. During
reading, look for words or phrases from those predictions.
-
While reading, revise the predictions or make new
ones.
Visualize
Many
students think visually, using shapes, spatial relationships, movement, and
colors, and can benefit greatly from this strategy. Instruct students:
-
Imagine a fiction story taking place as if it were
a movie. Imagine the characters' features. Picture the plot in time and space.
-
Imagine processes and explanations happening
visually. Use nouns, verbs, and adjectives to create pictures, diagrams, or
other mental images.
-
Use graphic organizers to lay out information.
Make sketches or diagrams on scrap paper.
Ask and Answer Questions
Having
students form their own questions helps them recognize confusion and
encourages active learning. Instruct students:
-
Before reading, think about the subject based on
the title, chapter heads, and visual information. Make note of anything you
are curious about.
-
While reading, pause and write down any questions.
Be sure to ask questions if there is confusion.
-
Look for the answers while reading. Pause and
write down the answers.
-
Were all the questions answered? Could the answers
come from other sources?
Retell and Summarize
Relating the
text in students' own words clears up language issues. Retelling challenges
them to aim for complete retention. Summarization allows students to
discriminate between main ideas and minor details. Instruct students:
-
During reading, note the main ideas or events. Put
a check mark in the book or write a note to point out a main idea.
-
At the ends of chapters or sections, review the
information or story. Note main ideas or events and the details that support
them.
-
After reading, retell or summarize the text. Focus
on the important points, and support them with relevant details.
-
Refer to the book to check the retelling or
summarization.
Connect the Text to Life Experiences, Other Texts, or Prior Knowledge
Connecting a
text to students' experiences and knowledge helps students personalize the
information. It also helps students remember information when they link it to
their lives. Instruct students:
-
Is the subject familiar? Do the characters
resemble familiar people? Have you learned about the concept from school,
home, or other experiences?
-
Is the style or genre familiar? Does it resemble
other texts? Television shows, movies, and games can be considered "texts."
-
Write down similarities between the current text
and experiences, knowledge, or other texts