Comprehension Skills, Strategies & Best Practices: Introduction/Overview
Comprehension Skills, Strategies & Best Practices: Introduction/Overview
Introduction/Overview
Types of Comprehension Strategies
Teaching Strategies
Sample Shared Reading Lesson
Sample Small-Group Reading Lesson
Introduction/Overview
This module explores comprehension strategies and their benefits. Examine descriptions of each type of
comprehension strategy, instructional implications for teaching comprehension, and sample lessons.
Although word recognition, decoding, and fluency are building blocks of effective reading, the ability to comprehend
text is the ultimate goal of reading instruction. Comprehension is a prerequisite for acquiring content knowledge and
expressing ideas and opinions through discussion and writing.
Comprehension is evident when readers can:
Interpret and evaluate events, dialogue, ideas, and information
Connect information to what they already know
Adjust current knowledge to include new ideas or look at those ideas in a different way
Determine and remember the most important points in the reading
Read “between the lines” to understand underlying meanings
Comprehension strategies work together like a finely tuned machine. The reader begins to construct meaning by
selecting and previewing the text. During reading, comprehension builds through predicting, inferring, synthesizing,
and seeking answers to questions that arise. After reading, deeper meaning is constructed through reviewing,
rereading portions of the text, discussion, and thoughtful reflection. During each of these phases, the reader relates
the text to his own life experiences.
Comprehension is powerful because the ability to construct meaning comes from the mind of the reader. Therefore,
specific comprehension instruction—modeling during read-alouds and shared reading, targeted mini-lessons, and
varied opportunities for practice during small-group and independent reading—is crucial to the development of
strategic, effective readers.
Teaching Strategies
Modeling through think-alouds is the best way to teach all comprehension strategies. By thinking aloud, teachers
show students what good readers do. Think-alouds can be used during read-alouds and shared reading. They can
also be used during small-group reading to review or reteach a previously modeled strategy.
Wilhelm (2001) describes a think-aloud as a way to:
Create a record of the strategic decision-making process of going through text
Report everything the reader notices, does, sees, feels, asks, and understands as she reads
Talk about the reading strategies being used within the content being read
There are many ways to conduct think-alouds:
The teacher models the think-aloud while she reads aloud, and the students listen.
The teacher thinks aloud during shared reading, and the students help out.
Students think aloud during shared reading, and the teacher and other students monitor and help.
The teacher or students think aloud during shared reading while writing on an overhead, on self-stick notes, or in a
journal.
Students think aloud in small-group reading, and the teacher monitors and helps.
Students individually think aloud during independent reading using self-stick notes or a journal. Then students
compare their thoughts with others.
(Wilhelm, 2001)
When you introduce a new comprehension strategy, model during read-aloud and shared reading:
1. Decide on a strategy to model.
2. Choose a short text or section of text.
3. Read the text ahead of time. Mark locations where you will stop and model the strategy.
4. State your purpose—name the strategy and explain the focus of your think-alouds.
5. Read the text aloud to students and think aloud at the designated points.
6. If you conduct a shared reading experience, have students highlight words and phrases that show evidence
of your thinking by placing self-stick notes in the book.
7. Reinforce the think-alouds with follow-up lessons in the same text or with others.
(Wilhelm, 2001)
Use the following language prompts to model the chosen strategy :
Make Connections
1. This reminds me of a time when I …
2. I know about this topic because I …
3. The setting of this book is just like …
4. This book is something like …
5. What's going on in this book is just like what's happening in …
Ask Questions
1. Before I read this text, I wonder about …
2. While I'm reading, I try to figure out …
3. After I read, I ask myself …
4. I wonder why…
5. What does this word mean?
6. Why did ____________ do that?
7. What is going to happen next?
8. Why did the author put that part in there?
9. I have questions about this part because it doesn't make sense. I need to make sure I read it right. If I reread
and fix a mistake, that might answer my question.
Visualize
1. The author gives me a picture in my mind when he or she describes …
2. I can really see what the author talks about when he or she …
3. I can draw a picture of what the author describes.
Determine Text Importance
1. I know these parts of the story are important because they match my purpose for reading, which was …
2. I believe the author thinks ____________ is important because …
3. I think the author's opinion about _____ is ______ because …
4. This text uses the (cause/effect, problem/solution, description, compare/contrast, sequence/steps in a
process) text structure. I can use a graphic organizer to help me understand it.
5. I see lots of information right here. I need to identify which parts are important and which parts are just
interesting.
6. All these ideas are important, but I think some are more important than others. I need to determine which
ideas are the most important.
7. This (chart, table, graph, time line) helps me understand that …
8. These (boldfaced words, font changes, bullets, captions) help me locate what is important.
9. Let me take the big ideas and summarize the text.
Make Inferences
1. The author says this, but means …
2. If I read between the lines, the author tells me that …
3. The clues to prove my inference are …
4. Because of what the author said, I know that …
5. From the clues or information the author gives, I can conclude that …
6. I think that ____________ will happen next because the author says ____________.
Synthesize
1. This story or passage is really about… My views on this are…
2. My opinion of _________ is …
3. I first thought ________ about the topic. Now I think …
4. I've read a lot of information. Let me stop and think about this for a minute.
5. My judgment of this information is …
6. From this information, I can generalize that …
Additional Tips
Revisit the same text to model more than one strategy. For example, on Monday, use a text to model what's
important versus what's interesting. On Tuesday, use the text to model how to identify big ideas. On Wednesday, use
the big ideas to summarize and synthesize.
Extend the text as a reader-response activity. For example, on Monday, use a text as a shared reading lesson to
model how cause-and-effect relationships help determine text importance. On Tuesday, extend thinking: map the
cause-and-effect relationships onto graphic organizers, synthesize big ideas, and draw conclusions.
K W L
(What I Know) (What I Want to Know) (What I Learned)
Plants have roots and leaves. What other plant parts are there?
K W L
(What I Know) (What I Want to Know) (What I Learned)
How can we grow a We can put soil and a seed in a cup, water it, and give it
plant? sunlight to grow our own plant.
Model how to determine the implied main idea utilizing a graphic organizer.
Remind students that to infer means to understand clues and evidence that the author has provided for us in the text.
Implications are not directly stated.
Say: The first part of the book (pages 2–11) gives me many details about the parts of a plant. One detail is that roots
help a plant stay in the ground. The book also tells me that roots help a plant get water. I'll write these facts in the
first Supporting Details box. Now I'll look for other details to add to my chart. Leaves make food for the plant. Stems
take water to the leaves and flowers. Flowers make seeds. New plants grow from seeds. All these details tell me how
the parts of a plant help it grow and stay alive. Even though the author didn't directly state this as the main idea, the
clues and evidence imply it. I'll write this on the chart where it reads Main Idea #1.
Main Idea/Supporting Details
Topic: Plants
Part 3
Guide students to identify the second implied main idea.
Briefly review pages 12–16. Then ask students to select the most important details and use those as clues and
evidence to find the implied main idea. If students need additional modeling and think-alouds, complete the remainder
of the graphic organizer together. If they seem to understand the concept, allow them to complete the graphic
organizer in small groups, pairs, or individually. Monitor their work and provide guidance as necessary. Allow time for
students to share their recorded information.
Main Idea/Supporting Details