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Seven Keys to Comprehension

Seven Keys to Comprehension. How to help kids READ and GET IT!. Monroe County Schools August 2011. Motion Picture of the Mind Key 1: Sensory Images Making Connections Key 2: Background Knowledge

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Seven Keys to Comprehension

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  1. Seven Keys to Comprehension How to help kids READ and GET IT! Monroe County Schools August 2011

  2. Motion Picture of the Mind Key 1: Sensory Images Making Connections Key 2: Background Knowledge Why, What, Where, Who, and How Key 3: Questioning Weaving Sense into Words Key 4: Drawing Inferences What’s Important and Why Key 5: Determining Importance Key 6: Synthesizing Cultivating Awareness Key 7: Fix-Up Strategies Reading is the greatest single effort that the human mind undertakes, and one must do it as a child. --John Steinbeck

  3. Create Mental Images Good readers create a wide range of visual, auditory, and sensory images as they read, and they become emotionally involved with what they read.

  4. Use Background Knowledge • Good Readers use their relevant prior knowledge before, during, and after reading to enhance their understanding of what they’re reading.

  5. Ask Questions Good readers generate questions before, during and after reading to clarify meaning, make predictions, and focus their attention on what’s important.

  6. Make Inferences Good readers use their prior knowledge and information from what they read to make predictions, seek answers to questions, draw conclusions, and create interpretations that deepen their understanding of the text.

  7. Determine the most important ideas or themes Good readers identify key ideas or themes as they read, and they can distinguish between important and unimportant information.

  8. Synthesize Information • New http://www.odu.edu/educ/roverbau/Bloom/blooms_taxonomy.htm

  9. “Fix-Up” Strategies • Good readers are aware of when they understand and when they don’t. • If they have trouble understanding specific words, phrases, or longer passages, they use a wide-range of problem solving strategies including skipping ahead, re-reading, asking questions, using a dictionary, and reading the passage aloud.

  10. When the mind is thinking, it is talking to itself. -Plato

  11. References

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