Developing Reading Skills

What is Reading comprehension?

word recognition

language comprehension

“Underpinning both is the understanding that the letters on the page represent sounds in spoken words. Good comprehension draws from linguistic knowledge - in particular of vocabulary and grammar and on knowledge of the world.”


“When we develop these skills we support progression in spoken language, reading and writing”

“In addition to explicit vocabulary instruction, there is clear evidence that teachers can support comprehension by modelling how expert readers read actively, including by monitoring their understanding, asking questions, making predictions and summarising” 

(Rosenshine, 1997; Oakhill et al., 2014; Davis, 2010; National Reading Panel, 2000; Stuart and Stainthorp, 2015)

How do we support reading skills across the whole school?

Reciprocal Reading

Reciprocal Reading is a structured approach to teaching the strategies of predicting, clarifying, questioning and summarising that students can use to improve their reading comprehension.

All staff have been trained in the 4 strategies and how we can best utilise them within lessons to support our learners not only with the immediate task or content but to equip them with the skills for future reading and advancement onto more challening texts.

Predict

Clarify

Question

Summarise