Knowledge and Skills Statement
One option for assessing this SE is through anecdotal notes and observation during a read aloud, shared reading or small-group reading instruction. The teacher can prompt students by asking strategic questions that lead them to make inferences and use evidence to support their responses.
Example Language for Drawing Inferences:
- Why do you think ____?
- How did you know ____?
- What probably caused ____?
- What clues led you to believe ____?
- How might ____ feel ____?
- I predict ____.
- I think that ____.
- My guess is ____.
When observing, a teacher may want to use a rubric to assess student responses.
Sample Rubric:
1) The student is unable to make inferences.
2) The student makes some inferences but is unable to use evidence to support understanding. (For example, the student can understand that a character might be sad but cannot explain how the student knows or how the student drew that conclusion.)
3) The student makes inferences using schema (background knowledge) and personal experiences as evidence to support understanding, but not text evidence.
4) The student makes inferences and uses schema, personal experiences, and clues in the text as evidence to support understanding.
Research
1. Gregory, A. E., & Cahill, M. A. (2010). Kindergarteners can do it, too!: Comprehension strategies for early readers. The Reading Teacher, 63(6), 515–200. Retrieved from https://www.jstor.org/stable/25615842
Summary: This article provides examples from a kindergarten classroom on how to teach the following comprehension strategies: making connections, visualizations, questioning, and inferences.
2. What Works Clearinghouse. (2010). Improving reading comprehension in kindergarten through 3rd grade: practice guide summary. Washington, DC: Institute of Education Science. Retrieved from https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/PracticeGuide/14#tab-summary
Summary: The goal of this practice guide is to offer educators specific evidence-based recommendations that address the challenge of teaching reading comprehension to students in kindergarten through 3rd grade. The guide provides practical, clear information on critical topics related to teaching reading comprehension and is based on the best available evidence as judged by the authors.