Reading Comprehension: The Ability To Make Meaning Out of Text
Reading Comprehension: The Ability To Make Meaning Out of Text
Students must:
• Be able to make personal connections with the text
• Understand meaning of vocabulary used
• Understand text structure
• Understand purpose for reading
Reading Comprehension Skills
Modeling Reading
Comprehension strategies
Concepts
• Cause and effect
• Sequencing
Comprehension Strategies for ELLs
Strategies to use while reading
Questioning
• Ask and answer questions about readings
Summarizing
Using graphic organizers
Monitoring comprehension as students read
Using text characteristics to aid comprehension
• headings, bold type, etc.
Note taking
Cognates
A word that is closely related to
another word in another language.
Remember
• If students are using cognates it is important to make
the process obvious: highlight the strategy.
• Help students realize that using cognates is a tool for
comprehension.
Using Cognate Word Walls
Word walls are created by the teacher,
and the class, as a way to display
vocabulary that they are using.
Older children
• Graphs
• Illustrations
Language Functions
Narrative text
• Vocabulary for description
• Adjectives
• Comparative language
Re-telling
• Vocabulary for order & sequencing
• First, next, afterwards
Helping ELLs Achieve
Academic Proficiency
Finding important information in text
Labeling
Read aloud
• Practice comprehension skills through listening to oral
reading.
Examples:
• timelines
• semantic maps
• story maps
• Venn diagrams
• cause-effect charts
More Tools: Thinking Maps
Help break down reading and concepts into
manageable parts so students interact more
effectively with the text.
Cross-check
Video
Reading for Meaning: Practicing Good
Strategies