Understanding Reading Comprehension
In this article we are going to address what comprehension is, what it is not, how to improve
it and why Fluent Readers have improved comprehension and recall.
First, a humorous example of what comprehension is not! ”I took a speed reading course and
read 'War and Peace' in twenty minutes. It involves Russia.” Woody Allen US movie actor,
comedian, & director
Saying the book involved Russia, as Woody Allen did, is not a demonstration
of comprehension. It is a demonstration of memorization. Asking one to only recall facts demonstrates
the lowest level of assessing an individual’s degree of comprehension.
Comprehension is a learning process. It is the ability to understand and gain meaning from what has
been read and being able to communicate this information to others. It is the reason for reading.
The Literacy Company's philosophy highlights the mutually dependent aspects of the teaching and the use of
reading.
One must Learn To Read in order to Read To Learn
Learning to Read involves well-known sequentially taught (learned) skills:
- Phonemic Awareness – The ability to hear and identify units of sounds in spoken words.
- Phonics – The relationship between the letters of written language and the sounds of spoken
language (e.g., c, a, ph, th, sh, etc.).
- Vocabulary – Words one must know to communicate effectively.
- Comprehension –The ability to understand and gain meaning from what is read.
- Assuming mastery of Phonemic Awareness, Phonics, Vocabulary and Comprehension, individuals
will have achieved Oral Reading Fluency.
Reading To Learn involves less well-known skills that must be learned (and can be taught)
in order for individuals to be able to have the reading skills necessary to learn
through reading. They are:
- Silent Reading Fluency – Individuals must learn to transition from Oral Reading Skills to Silent
Reading Skills, i.e., to read more than one word at a time without vocalizing. Otherwise, armed only
with Oral Reading Skills, they will live and work in a world that requires silent reading skills. The
result: They will be destined to be poor readers (with poor comprehension) all their lives.
Everyone must learn the truth about the common misconception that, to achieve understanding and
comprehension, one must read slowly. The opposite is true!
- Vocabulary – 90% of one’s vocabulary development comes from reading after the 4th grade. If
one is a poor reader, reading becomes a chore, which translates into minimal growth in one's reading
and vocabulary development.
If one is a good reader, one reads a lot and his/her vocabulary grows. The more the vocabulary grows
the more one reads and the gateway to learning is opened.
Vocabulary knowledge is the core skill of successful Fluent Readers that enables them to read faster
and better with much greater comprehension, along with much improved recall. The Reader’s Edge employs
a unique feature, Prime Words Lists, that facilitate the ability to learn to read groups of words and
thereby increase vocabulary. This ensures an individual’s continued growth of comprehension skills.
- Prior Knowledge – Readers use their background knowledge automatically. Here again, the more one
reads, the more one’s vocabulary grows, the easier it is to understand new material. The more one's
prior knowledge is applied to what is read, the more effective and efficient will be their
comprehension.
- Generating and Answering Questions is a form of reciprocal teaching that improves the levels of
comprehension. For example, consider a reading selection about the American Pledge of Allegiance
and the questions and issues that could be generated and how this would determine one’s level of
comprehension. For instance, your comprehension would be on the highest level if you would feel
comfortable responding to the below listed types of questions. (Bloom’s Taxonomy of Cognitive
Outcomes, Developed by W. Jackson – 2/12/96. Listed below are the range of levels used to assess the degree
of comprehension achieved by an individual.)
| Level |
Concept |
Example/Question |
| Knowledge |
Memorization |
Recite the Pledge. |
| Comprehension |
Understanding Meaning |
Reword the Pledge. |
| Application |
Apply ideas, principles |
Demonstrate other Allegiances. |
| Analysis |
Analyze Structure |
Difference between Allegiance to the Flag or to the principles for which it stands. |
| Synthesis |
Combine current and prior knowledge |
Create a new Pledge. |
| Evaluation |
Make judgements based on your understanding |
How does Allegiance apply in today's world? |
In summary, the reader’s level of comprehension is the result of a seamless combination of achieving improved
skills in the areas of:
- Silent Reading Fluency
- Vocabulary Development
- Prior Knowledge – What you bring to the text as a reader.
- Mentally Generating and Answering Questions - A form of self-teaching that improves levels of comprehension.
Remember, the more you read, the more your vocabulary will grow.
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with The Reader's Edge software.
See how easy it is to improve your reading speed, comprehension, retention and
recall with only 15 minutes of practice every other day. Get started today!
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