Comprehension strategies for first grade


First Grade Reading Comprehension Activities

First grade is an exciting time of discovery for early readers. They’re spending less time decoding and word solving and more time comprehending and making sense of the texts they’re reading. Early readers are building reading identities and reading for meaning and joy. Explicitly teaching reading comprehension strategies like making predictions, asking questions, retelling, and inferring helps young readers build the skills they need. These first grade reading comprehension activities are a good place to start.

1. String up a retelling rope

Learning how to retell a story helps young learners as readers and thinkers. It helps them organize their thoughts as they read and recognize when their thinking changes. Using these symbols representing different elements of a story, students can string up a cute retelling rope while gaining valuable comprehension skills.

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Learn more: First Grade W. O.W.

2. Visualize the story with illustrations

Visualizing is an important skill for understanding what you’re reading. This blog includes two fun visualizing activities. In the first, students are given a title and are asked to draw an illustration that matches that title. In the second, students are given clues about an object and are asked to draw the object the clues are hinting at.

Learn more: You Clever Monkey

3. Make predictions with a graphic organizer

Making predictions is a just-right reading strategy for emerging readers. During a read-aloud, find a few good stopping points to ask students what they think will happen next.

Learn more: Brown Bag Teacher

4. Make a “beginning, middle, and end” flip chart

One tried-and-true way to teach summarizing to early readers is instructing them to identify the beginning, middle, and end of a story. This easy-to-make flip chart is just an 8 x 11 piece of plain paper folded vertically then divided into thirds. On the front half, students will draw a picture of what happens in the three sections of the story. Underneath each flap is a short written description.

Learn more: Bishop’s Blackboard

5. Ask questions with story sticks

Good readers ask questions before, during, and after they read. These cute story sticks make a game of first grade reading comprehension. Perfect to use with small reading groups or with partners.

Learn more: The Happy Teacher

6. Master the five-finger retell

One strategy you can teach students is the five finger retell. Each finger stands for a different part of the story. Assigning a different finger for each part gives students a kinesthetic connection and makes it easier for them to remember.

Learn more: Mrs. Wheeler’s First Grade Tidbits

7. Summarize using simple signal words

Sometimes with early readers, simpler is better. Start with these basic questions—who?, what?, when?, where?, how?, and why?—to help kids go deeper into their understanding.

Learn more: This Reading Mama

8. Practice with story maps

There are tons of fun tools to help students build reading comprehension, and story maps are one of them. Here are 15 free downloadable story maps to help your first graders practice going beyond just the words when they read.

Learn more: Education.com

9. Figure out problem and solution with a graphic organizer

Every fiction story has, among other elements, a problem and solution. This lesson helps students understand that a story’s problem and solution fit together like pieces of a puzzle.

Learn more: My Primary Paradise

10. Retell the story using LEGO bricks

Put two things that first graders love together: reading and building. Read a story together, then allow students to use blocks to build a scene from the story. As they build, they can describe details from the story.

Learn more: The Educators’ Spin On It

11. Retell using story cubes

Retelling is a helpful comprehension skill for readers. These six cubes encourage readers to retell the story in different ways. They are prefect for reading partners and to use with small groups.

Learn more: Every educaid

 12. Play the Oh Snap! word game

Sight words (aka high-frequency words) are words readers encounter most frequently in texts. Early readers benefit from knowing a large bank of sight words, which encourages fluent reading. This fun sight word game is a great way to improve reading skills and build reading fluency.

Learn more: School Time Snippets

13. Use scooping phrases

The goal of reading fluency is better comprehension. To read with fluency or expression, readers must comprehend the story events. Teach early readers to use “Scooping Phrases” to scoop up words to form phrases within sentences. This effective strategy also works well with struggling readers.

Learn more: This Reading Mama

14. Introduce wordless picture books

As readers encounter more-difficult texts, character traits become less explicit. To determine what the character is like, the reader has to do more inferential work. Using wordless picture books is a great way to introduce early readers to making inferences.

Learn more: Ashleigh’s Education Journey

15. Inference using thought bubbles

Foundational inference activities give first graders an opportunity to practice their inferring skills. As they move into texts, first graders can infer what a character is thinking in the story and then add a thought bubble to explain it.

Learn more: The Teacher Next Door

If you like these first grade reading comprehension activities, check out our fun, printable first grade writing prompts.

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Comprehension: Activities for Your First Grader

Overview

First graders are quickly developing impressive skills as active readers! Here are some of the things your first grader can do:

  • Independently read and retell familiar stories.
  • Notice when a text doesn't make sense, and begins to use strategies such as rereading, predicting, and questioning to understand it.
  • Read and understand fiction and nonfiction and know the difference between made-up stories and facts.
  • Predict what will happen next in stories.
  • Think about and share prior knowledge before reading a nonfiction book.
  • Discusses how, why, and what-if questions in sharing nonfiction texts.
  • Answer simple written comprehension questions.

Here are some basic things you can do to boost your child's comprehension skills:

Try to read at home together every day

Just 15 minutes each day makes a big difference! Although your first grader may be reading independently, reading aloud allows you to introduce your child to more sophisticated vocabulary and stories, including chapter books.  It's also one of the best ways to help children learn about the world and make connections between their own lives and what's in the book — and that helps children see the world with empathy. And last but not least, it's a wonderful time to snuggle up with your child and share the experience of reading and discovery together.

Keep it fun 

Remember that reading together should spark curiosity, joy, and a desire to explore and learn. Conversations about books should be enjoyable, and not a set of quizzes and questions. As you try some of the activities listed below, remember to keep it light and lively for your child.

Storytelling and audiobooks count, too 

Sharing family stories out loud and listening to audiobooks are wonderful ways to expose your child to language, how stories are built, and knowledge about the world.

Bring in the nonfiction

There are so many great nonfiction and informational books for very young kids (such as the popular DK Eyewitness series and National Geographic series). Try to include some of these during your next trip to the public library. Children love learning about the real world and are proud to share what they know!

Explore your world together

Even a walk around the neighborhood or a trip to the grocery store can be a rich learning experience for young children. On a walk, your child may watch what's going on at a construction site, and then be able to connect it to stories about building and the big machines that make it happen — bulldozers, cranes, cement mixers, and more. These personal connections help children connect what they read with what they know — a powerful way to build comprehension skills!

Signs of good reading comprehension in first graders

Try these comprehension activities at home

"I predict ..."

When you sit down for a read aloud, look at the book's cover together. Ask, "What do you think this book might be about? Why? Can you make some predictions?" Guide your child through the pages, discuss the pictures, and brainstorm what might happen in the story. Talk about any personal experiences your child may have that relate to the story.

Five-finger retell

After reading a story together, have your child tell you five things about the story, using her fingers to talk about each one:

  1. Characters: who was in the story?
  2. Setting: where did the story take place?
  3. Events: what happened in the story?
  4. End: how did the story end?
  5. Favorite character or part of the story

Active reading

Model active reading when you read with your child. Talk about what's happening as you're reading. Stop and discuss any interesting or tricky vocabulary words. Help your child make pictures of the story in his mind. Ask your child, "What just happened here? How do you think that character feels? Have you ever felt like that? What do you think will happen next?" Not only will this develop your child’s comprehension, but critical thinking skills as well.

Mind movies

When you come to a descriptive passage in a book, have your child close her eyes and create a mental movie of the scene. Encourage her to use all five senses. Read the passage over together, looking for details that bring the scene to life. Ask questions like, “How do you know it was a hot day? Which words help you understand that the child was lonely?”

Tell me about it

After a read aloud, one of the best and easiest ways to check for understanding is to ask your child to summarize what the book was about in their own words. You can ask a question or two to help your child clarify her thinking or to add more detail.

Can your child tell you what happened in the story?

This video is from Home Reading Helper, a resource for parents to elevate children’s reading at home provided by Read Charlotte. Find more video, parent activities, printables, and other resources at Home Reading Helper.

Think alouds

Connect the book to your child's own life experience. For example, A River Dream: "This book reminds me of the time my father took me fishing. Do you remember the time we went fishing?"

Connect the book to other books they have read. For example, Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters: "This story reminds me of Cinderella. Both stories are about sisters. Do you know any other stories about nice and mean sisters? Let's keep reading to find out other ways the stories are similar."

Connect the book to big ideas/lessons. For example, Stellaluna: "This story helps me understand that we are all the same in many ways, but it's our differences that make us special."

Wordless

Wordless picture books provide your child with practice using clues to create meaning. There are no wrong stories with wordless picture books, only variations based on what the "reader" sees and puts together. Rosie's Walk, Good Dog, Carl, and Beaver Is Lost are all interesting and fun wordless picture books to explore. Find more wordless books on BookFinder.

Map this book!

Draw a map of the book's setting, and be sure to include the places where the main action happens!

Beginning-middle-end

This is a great way to see if your child understands the main parts of a story. After reading a book together, give your child three sheets of paper, with "beginning" on one sheet, "middle" on the second sheet, and "end" on the third sheet. Ask your child to think about the three parts of the story, and then draw what happened on each on the sheets. Arrange the sheets in order, left to right. What happens if you re-arrange the sheets? Does the story still make sense?

Words, words, words

Be sure to include books with rich vocabulary in your read alouds and call attention to interesting words and phrases from the story. This may include repeated phrases or idioms (such as "get cold feet" or "I'm all ears"). Offer a kid-friendly definition and connect the new word or phrase to something your child already knows. Talk about how the author used language or words to make the text interesting, informative, funny, or sad.

Illustrated timelines

After reading a story, have your child create an illustrated timeline of events from the story. Tape together five sheets of paper along the 8-1/2-inch side to create one very wide sheet that is 55 inches X 8-1/2 inches. To help plan the timeline, your child can add numbers that mark important points of the story. Then it's time to fill in the sequence of events with words and pictures. Once the timeline is complete, ask your child to re-tell the story — acting it out is okay, too! Variation: Create the timeline using Post-Its on a wall or outside using sidewalk chalk.

Talk show

Set up a talk show set with two chairs facing each other. If you like, make two microphones out of paper tubes or other craft supplies. You are the host and your child is a character from the book. Ask questions about the character, such as who you are, why you are important to the story, what happened to you in the story, what is the craziest interaction you had with another character, etc. Then switch roles!

Book trailer

Using a cell phone camera or other recording device, make a short video of your child talking about about why he recommends this book. Encourage your child to show the book cover and some of the inside pages when talking about a certain character or action sequence. Share the book trailer with family and friends!

Picture the character (Part 1)

Try this activity from the Florida Center for Reading Research (FCRR). The FCRR "At Home" series was developed especially for families! Watch the video and then download the activity: Picture the Character. See all FCRR comprehension activities here.

Picture the character (Part 2)

Try this activity from the Florida Center for Reading Research (FCRR). The FCRR "At Home" series was developed especially for families! Watch the video and then download the activity: Picture the Character. See all FCRR comprehension activities here.

Does your first grader read to learn about things?

More comprehension resources

Effective strategies for working with text in the classroom at school

The ultimate goal of teaching Russian is practical literacy and language competence. The basis of the content of literature as an academic subject is reading and textual study of works of art.

Work with the text as the main didactic unit allows schoolchildren to combine the activities of developing practical skills of literate writing and speech development.

Every teacher dreams that all students come to the lesson prepared: they have completely read this or that work or paragraph. And not just read, but understood the meaning of the text read. During the final certification, the graduate must also understand the meaning of the read text. Whether it is a task to the text or the text itself.

Teachers working in grades 9 and 11 know that most mistakes are made due to misunderstanding of what is read, as well as when reading the assignment itself.

Teaching a child to read “correctly”, “effectively”, “productively” is an important task for a teacher. That is why the technology of productive reading (PRT), developed by Professor N. Svetlovskaya, acquires a leading role and contributes to the achievement of the results that are mentioned in the new standards.

The technology is universal and can be used in lessons of any cycle.

It is aimed at the formation of all universal educational activities: cognitive, communicative, regulatory, personal.

The technology of productive reading differs sharply from the traditional technology of transferring ready-made knowledge to a student. The teacher organizes the children's research work in such a way that they themselves "think" about solving the key problem of the lesson and can themselves explain how to act in new conditions. The teacher becomes a partner, a mentor, an observer.

The developed technology includes three stages of working with text, a three-stage process.

The goal of is the development of anticipation (the ability to guess, predict the content of the text). Task - to develop motivation for reading the text

1. Strategy "Forecast by headline".

Task: think about what can be discussed in the story of K.G. Paustovsky "Warm bread", in the work of P.P. Bazhov "Mistress of the Copper Mountain", etc.

– Try to predict the content by the first line of the story…Remember the name of the story…. Does the content of the story match the title?

Give examples of such discrepancies.

Associative bush (circle, row). Today we will read and discuss the topic… What associations do you have about the stated topic?

2. Strategy "Brainstorm" ("Basket of ideas").

Task: answer the questions before reading the text (fairy tales "Warm bread") - What do you know about K. G. Paustovsky? What do you think the story will be about? Who can be the main character? What event in the story can be described.

3. Strategy "Image of the text".

Task: check your assumptions. Based on the words taken from the text, try to make a short plot story. The title of the story is given.

4. Strategy "Battery of questions".

Task: make up questions to the text according to the title, according to the illustrations.

5. Glossary strategy.

Task: look at the list of words and mark those that can be related to the text. When you finish reading the text, go back to these words and look at their meaning and the use of words used in the text.

6. "Competing with the writer" strategy.

Task: try to predict the content of the book by looking at the illustrations. One student offers his version, the rest complete it.

7. Strategy "True and False Statements".

8. Strategy I know, I want to know, I found out.

Stage 2 - stage of text activity.

The purpose of is to understand the text and create its reader's interpretation, summarizing part of the read text, asking questions of a general nature, making assumptions about the further development of the plot and the role of characters in the composition of the text, etc.).

The main task of is to ensure the full perception of the text. The main strategies at the stage of text activity are dialogue with the author, commented reading.

1. Strategy "Reading in a circle". The text is read in turn (each "circle member" reads a paragraph). After this, a stop follows: everyone asks questions to the read passage. If the question cannot be answered (it does not correspond to the text), then the question is considered incorrect. * All correct questions can be recorded.

2. Silent reading with questions strategy.

3. Strategy “Reading to yourself with notes. (Insert)" . Marginal notes: + - knew; - - new; ? - interesting; V is unclear. Others are possible: B - question; O - answer; Z - I know; N - new; And - interesting; X - I want to know; C - ask; U to clarify.

4. Strategy "Reading with stops". Reading the text with stops, during which tasks are given in the form of questions: some are aimed at checking understanding, others - at predicting the content of the next passage.

5. "Pose a problem - offer a solution" strategy. Remember what problems the heroes of the work face (the problem is formulated and written down in an oval). Next, the children can name several problems, students are divided into groups and offer all kinds of solutions to problems.

6. Strategy "Creating a question plan". The student carries out a semantic grouping of the text, highlights the strong points, divides the text into semantic parts and titles each part with a key question…….

Stage 3 – stage of post-text (post-text) activity.

The purpose of is to correct the reader's interpretation in accordance with the author's meaning.

The main task of is to provide in-depth perception and understanding of the text, to raise a question to the text as a whole, followed by a conversation, the result of which should be an understanding of the author's meaning. Re-addressing the title, illustrations, performing creative tasks.

2. Question tree strategy Crown – what? where? when? Barrel - why? How? Could you? Roots - how to relate the text to life? With current events? What is the author trying to show?

3. Strategy "Bloom's Cube" (Benjamin Bloom is a famous American teacher, author of many pedagogical strategies = technician).

The beginnings of the questions are written on the faces of the cube: “Why?”, “Explain”, “Name”, “Suggest”, “Think up”, “Share”. The teacher or student rolls the die.

It is necessary to formulate a question to the educational material on the side on which the cube fell.

The “Name” question is aimed at the level of reproduction, i.e. at the simple reproduction of knowledge.

Question "Why" - the student in this case must find cause-and-effect relationships, describe the processes occurring with a certain object or phenomenon.

“Explain ” question – student uses concepts and principles in new situations.

All of the above strategies provide for serious work with the text, its deep analysis and understanding, the organization of independent cognitive activity of students on educational material. socially moral experience and makes you think, knowing the world around you.

Technology Advantage:

1. Applicable in the lessons of any cycle and at any level of education.

2. Focused on personal development.

3. Develops the ability to predict the results of reading.

4. Promotes understanding of the text in the lesson.

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Bocharova A.

A. | STRATEGIES OF TEXT UNDERSTANDING BY READERS OF JUNIOR SCHOOL AGE IN THE CONDITIONS OF THE CAPITAL MEGAPOLIS

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primary school teacher GBOU , School 0222 Moscow. E- mail : Sasha - fox 95@ mail . Reading is the means of acquiring new knowledge necessary for further learning. A student who does not read well, it is difficult to acquire new knowledge. The modern process of schooling suggests that the student must work independently. Inadequate mastery of the reading technique by students, and most importantly, a misunderstanding of the text read and the inability to retell it, entails serious difficulties in the learning process, which in the future can lead to student failure [5].

For successful learning to read, a child must develop an interest in and love for a book, the ability to perceive and understand what is read, answer questions about the content, independently retell simple works, determine their attitude to the characters. All these qualities begin to form and develop already in preschool age.

As program requirements become more complex, students experience difficulties in developing reading skills. Poorly formed reading skills lead to the fact that children read the text with significant distortions. Errors that violate the correct reading are increasingly becoming typical for students in mass schools and are a rather persistent phenomenon that hinders the development of a child's fluent reading skills.

What could be the reason for this? Most often, the main reason is that modern mothers have stopped reading to children and practically do not communicate with them - they stick to gadgets and teach children to gadgets almost from the cradle. The same habit is adopted by today's children.

“At the age of 2.5 today, 90% of children already have a complete or partial speech delay. And already at this age they become gadget addicts. This is a consequence of the fact that no one is engaged in them, because the development of speech is communication with the child, reading books to him aloud. Instead, mothers prefer to stick a mobile phone or tablet to their baby to go about their business - hang out on social networks, sit in chats with girlfriends, ”child neurologists say. “We are faced with the fact that modern mothers practically do not know lullabies; they don’t know how to sing rhythmic ditties, which are so necessary for the proper development of children,” says Professor, Dean of the Faculty of Pediatrics and Head of the Department of Hospital Pediatrics No. 2 of the Russian National Research Medical University. Pirogova Lidia Ilyenko.

The above examples and our own pedagogical experience prompted us to take a closer look at the features of the formation of reading skills in primary school, in particular among students in the 2nd grade in which we work.

Let's give a brief description of our class.

From the point of view of the level of formation of reading skills, we identified several groups of

students.

1 group. Good reading children 7 people ( Angelina B. , Svyatoslav V., Kirill Z., Alina M., Miroslava R., Varvara T., Miroslav K.). Families are complete, children love to read and enjoy reading literature outside the school curriculum. In families, parents also read books. Alexei G. could also be included here, he reads well, in full words, but does not always understand what he has read. At home, he does not read either the literature recommended by the program or additional literature. We believe that family relations do not contribute to this: the family has many children (8 children), parents themselves do not read.

Other groups of students have difficulties with reading skills.

2nd group. Poor reading children: poor reading technique (read slowly, with errors, there are problems with understanding the text being read), children do not like to read, they are lazy, although families are reading. This group consists of 4 people. Here are their brief characteristics.

Eva B . - is not brought up in a complete family. Has an older sister. Unfortunately, the girl does not want to study at all. Mom reads at home and loves books, but Eva does not. Reads poorly in syllables, does not understand what she just read. Polina Z . - Brought up in a complete family. The girl is lazy to read, although she knows how to do a lot, but she does not do it, unless she is forced to. He reads badly, in whole words, but there are many mistakes in placing stress in words. Does not understand the content of the read text. If only 3 times. Parents reading. This includes Stepan P. and Alexander Sh.

There is a group of children (Group 3) who experience serious difficulties in reading due to social, speech therapy and even medical indications. Here is a brief description of these students.

Vladislava V. is brought up in an incomplete family. Mom died when the girl was still very young (she was a drug addict). My father is already retired - he is 68 years old. Grandmother (mother's mother) - she is 54 years old, works with Vladislava. Vlada has deviations for health reasons - delayed speech development (ZPR. Type 5.1). She definitely needs speech therapy. The girl hardly reads (by syllables), she makes a lot of mistakes when answering a question (if they are written). Orally answers well, but in monosyllables. Dimitry M. is diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), and is undergoing drug treatment for elevated levels. He is constantly distracted and interferes with everyone in the area. Brought up in a complete family (with a stepfather). Mom loves to read, but Dima, unfortunately, does not. Very often he does not even read what was given at home. Valeria O . reads very badly, in syllables and then barely. She writes with errors, often understanding the meaning of what she writes. As my mother says, she works with her at home, but according to the results, this is not observed. The family is not complete. Parents reading.

Finally, in a separate group - the fourth - we singled out children for whom Russian is not their native language. This group consists of 4 people. Seymour A. has a father who speaks Russian with a pronounced accent, while grandmother and mother have a less pronounced accent. Dad writes illiterate in Russian. Grandmother works as a primary school teacher, she takes care of the child and makes him read. Seymour himself does not like to read. In Tsovinar A. , the family speaks with a pronounced accent. Tsovinar reads, but only what is given as homework. Reads badly and syllable by syllable, gets confused in stress. Does not read supplementary literature. Parents also don't like to read. Ilona B. incomplete family. They are refugees from Ukraine. Raised by mother and grandmother. Mom and Ilona speak with an accent. Reads poorly, in syllables. Swaps words around and puts the stress wrong. In the family, grandmother and mother force Ilona to read, but she only reads what is given as homework. Yasmina Ya. is brought up in a complete family (has a brother). The family speaks their native language. We study with her additionally, gradually we have achieved that only by the end of the second grade she reads simple words completely (not by syllables). Doesn't understand many words when reading. The pace of reading is very slow. He reads additional literature, but very reluctantly. Mom very often asks how to do homework, as she herself does not understand what is written.

We noticed that most children have difficulty understanding what they read. To clarify the overall picture in this matter, as well as to draw up a program to improve (develop) reading skills, we conducted a pedagogical experiment.

The skill of understanding is a complex and multifaceted skill: to understand the text, it is necessary to read and understand the meaning of the words of the text correctly, to see the connections of words in sentences, to understand the essence of statements made in the form of sentences, taking into account the semantic load of words and punctuation marks. Finally, the understanding of text information also has a complex structure and is often based on the sequential assimilation of different types of information: factual, subtextual and conceptual information [1, p. 244].

One of the features is the ability of primary school students to understand words when reading. We conducted a study on the basis of the second class. The reading of second-graders, according to the conclusion of children's reading experts, is "word-centric" [3]. This means that the main task of a reader of this age is the correct reading and "recognition" of the read word, if he used this word in his oral speech, or a longer process of understanding the word, if he had not seen it before in his speech practice [4].

We hypothesized that word comprehension would have an impact on text comprehension as a whole, i.e. represented the process of understanding as if in a linear form: understanding of words - understanding of sentences - understanding of the text. The essence of the measurement study was as follows. The students were presented with a text printed on A4 paper, which had to be read twice. During the first reading, or immediately after reading, it was necessary to mark (underline) words that were not understood for one reason or another. Then the children read the same text again and again underlined the words that caused difficulties. The measurement was carried out on the material of the text of V. Bianchi "Musician", which is quite within the power of readers - second-graders: it is often placed in textbooks on literary reading for grade 2. The volume of this text is 286 words, it is designed to work during one lesson, i.e. has an optimal volume as a teaching material for reading lessons [2].

The experimental data have been processed and are presented in the diagram.

Diagram 1. Data on lexical difficulties of second-graders during independent reading of V. Bianchi's story "Musician".

The most frequent words of the text, which students noted as incomprehensible both during the first and secondary reading of the text of V. Bianchi's story, were the following: mezhdvezhatnik, mound, collective farmer, after a while, edge, sliver, split . Of course, the second time the students read more carefully and read the words. Words bugbear, after a while , on the second reading, the children understood. And such words as zavalka and split in the second case caused more difficulties for children than in the first.

After the work done, together with the children, we looked for explanations of complex words in dictionaries and wrote these words in our notebook to memorize them. At the next lesson of literary reading, we offered the children questions (written) on this work. The questions were aimed at students' understanding of factual information, for example, “Who is a safecracker? Where was the bear cub? Who could not find the old man? Where did the old man sit in the forest?

Diagram 2. The number of children's errors when answering questions

We also made a comparative diagram of the number of words that caused difficulties after the first reading and the number of errors in children when answering questions.

Diagram 3. Comparative diagram of the number of words that caused difficulties after the first reading and the number of errors in children when answering questions.

Most students have a correlation between understanding words and comprehending the factual information of the text (Varvara, Alexander Sh., Yasmina, Ilona, ​​Angelina - those who have a correlation between understanding words and understanding factual information).

Considering that after the discovery of lexical difficulties, we carried out some work to eliminate these difficulties, we can say the following about the strategies for understanding the text by second-graders. A linear strategy for understanding the test (from word to sentence to text) was demonstrated by 6 people: Eva B., Angelina B., Varvara T., Yasmina Ya., Valeria O., Svyatoslav V., Alina M.

Our study showed that the formation of semantic reading skills (text understanding skills) may not be linear, for example, in our students Stepan and Vladislava, who did not experience great difficulties in understanding words, but found significant difficulties in understanding the text.

Thus, it can be argued that the linear strategy of text comprehension is characteristic of many second-graders. Further research will be aimed at understanding what is the understanding strategy of some students, such as Vladislava and Stepan, as well as some other students.

Literature

  1. Methods of teaching the Russian language and literary reading: textbook and workshop / ed. T.I. Zinovieva. M.: Yurayt Publishing House, 2017. - 468 p. Series: Vocational education.
  2. Silchenkova L.S. Methods of teaching younger schoolchildren to read large-volume works. Dissertation for the degree of candidate of pedagogical sciences / M .: MGPI (MPGU). Moscow, 1987. 150 p.
  3. Silchenkova L.S. Psychology of the formation of the reading mechanism // Primary school. 2010. No. 7. S. 74-80.
  4. Silchenkova L.S. Vocabulary and lexical work at reading lessons // Primary School. 2012. No. 10. P. 13-17.
  5. Silchenkova L.S. Formation of conscious reading skills in younger students / Language and literary education in modern society - 2016. Collection of scientific articles based on the results of the All-Russian scientific and practical conference with international participation.

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