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Comprehension: The
Goal of Reading
Comprehension, or extracting meaning from what you read, is
the ultimate goal of reading. Experienced readers take this for granted and may
not appreciate the reading comprehension skills required. The process of
comprehension is both interactive and strategic. Rather than passively reading
text, readers must analyze it, internalize it and make it their own.
In order to read with comprehension, developing readers must
be able to read with some proficiency and then receive explicit instruction in
reading comprehension strategies (Tierney, 1982).
General Strategies
for Reading Comprehension
The process of comprehending text begins before children can
read, when someone reads a picture book to them. They listen to the words, see
the pictures in the book, and may start to associate the words on the page with
the words they are hearing and the ideas they represent.
In order to learn comprehension strategies, students need
modeling, practice, and feedback. The key comprehension strategies are
described below.
Using Prior Knowledge/Previewing
When students preview text, they tap into what they already
know that will help them to understand the text they are about to read. This
provides a framework for any new information they read.
Predicting
When students make predictions about the text they are about
to read, it sets up expectations based on their prior knowledge about similar
topics. As they read, they may mentally revise their prediction as they gain
more information.
Identifying the Main
Idea and Summarization
Identifying the main idea and summarizing requires that
students determine what is important and then put it in their own words.
Implicit in this process is trying to understand the author’s purpose in
writing the text.
Questioning
Asking and answering questions about text is another
strategy that helps students focus on the meaning of text. Teachers can help by
modeling both the process of asking good questions and strategies for finding
the answers in the text.
Making Inferences
In order to make inferences about something that is not
explicitly stated in the text, students must learn to draw on prior knowledge
and recognize clues in the text itself.
Visualizing
Studies have shown that students who visualize while reading
have better recall than those who do not (Pressley, 1977). Readers can take
advantage of illustrations that are embedded in the text or create their own
mental images or drawings when reading text without illustrations.




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