- A Parent's Guide to Helping Children Understand What They Read We are working on important ways to better understand what we read. Listed below are 8 comprehension strategies that are being taught. When reading, watching TV, talking or sharing a special time together, you can help by asking some questions that will help your child. Parent Question for Discussion Comprehension Strategy What Good Readers Do Good readers think about the information that they What does this remind you already know to better of? understand what they read, Recall Prior Knowledge Good readers use their background knowledge and clues from what has been read to think about what will happen next. What do you think will happen next? Why? Predict What was most important about what you've just read? Why was that important to you? Good readers are able to explain the most important ideas. Identify Main Idea Good readers ask themselves questions to better understand what they read. What is a question you have so far? Question Good readers make pictures in their minds to help them understand what they are reading. Create Pictures in Your Mind What are you seeing in your mind as you are reading this? Good readers use what they already know and ideas for the book to make a conclusion about an event or person. How do you know that __ will happen? Why do you suppose acted that way? Make Inferences Good readers can explain the most important ideas from Tell me what this story is Summarize . . . . “b°”+' . beginning, middle and end of Explain the most Important the story. details from this information. What can you do to read Good readers have more that that word? Clarify one way to clear up what What might help you to they do not understand. understand this confusing part better? Teri Trail, Reading Support Teacher