Course Content
Welcome
🌱 Module 1: Foundation & Mindset
Theme: Laying the emotional groundwork for joyful, resilient reading. Before we build skills, we build mindset. This module helps parents shift from correction to connection—seeing mistakes as moments for growth and collaboration. You’ll learn to nurture motivation, model authentic joy, and partner with teachers to create a united reading village that supports your child’s confidence from the inside out. 🌸 Module Takeaway When parents reframe challenges, nurture curiosity, and model joy, reading shifts from obligation to opportunity. The mindset you plant here becomes the root system for every confident reader who blooms from your care.
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🌿 Module 2: Environment & Book Selection
Theme: Crafting spaces and selecting stories that nurture autonomy, curiosity, and connection. In this module, you’ll learn how to make reading feel like an irresistible invitation—not a requirement. You’ll transform both the physical and emotional environment so reading time feels safe, cozy, and joyfully child-led. From creating the perfect nook to choosing books that meet your child right where they are, every lesson helps you set the stage for deeper engagement and lifelong love of reading. 🌸 Module Takeaway Creating the right environment and book match transforms reading from an activity into a relationship. When children feel comfortable, capable, and represented, they don’t just read more—they love to read.
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📖 Module 3: Read-Aloud Techniques
Theme: Bringing stories to life through voice, movement, and connection. In this module, you’ll learn how to turn every story into a shared adventure—one that engages your child’s imagination, strengthens comprehension, and deepens your bond. Through expressive reading, playful interaction, and mindful conversation, you’ll discover how to make read-aloud time not just educational, but magical. 🌸 Module Takeaway When you read with heart, stories become more than words—they become shared worlds. This module helps you infuse warmth, curiosity, and creativity into every read-aloud moment so your child feels connected, confident, and eager for more.
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🧠 Module 4: Skill Development
Theme: Weaving skills into joyful, meaningful reading moments. This module shows you how to build core reading skills—phonics, comprehension, independence, and learning-style alignment—without sacrificing connection or fun. You’ll learn simple, research-aligned moves that fit naturally into read-alouds and everyday routines. 🌸 Module Takeaway Skills stick when they’re woven into stories with warmth, intention, and child-led choice.
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Understanding how to create a structure in Tutor LMS
In this Module you will learn how to create a sturture for your course
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Testing the Hirachy
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From Chaos to Connection

COMPREHENSION STRATEGIES REFERENCE GUIDE

Your Complete Guide to Building Understanding

This guide explains the key comprehension strategies that good readers use—and how you can teach them through conversation!


🎯 THE BIG SIX COMPREHENSION STRATEGIES

Research shows that proficient readers use six key strategies. Here’s how to teach each one through conversation:


1. MAKING CONNECTIONS 🌉

What it is: Linking the story to personal experiences, the real world, or other texts

Why it matters: Connections anchor new information in memory and build empathy

How to teach it:

TEXT-TO-SELF

Linking story to child’s own life

Prompts to use:

  • “Does this remind you of something that happened to you?”
  • “Have you ever felt this way?”
  • “What would you do in this situation?”

Example: Book: Character is nervous about first day of school You: “Remember when you were nervous about your first swim lesson? How did that feel?”

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: Focus on concrete experiences (“That dog looks like Grandma’s dog!”)
  • Ages 5-7: Include emotional experiences (“Have you ever felt lonely like this character?”)
  • Ages 8+: Connect to more abstract experiences (“This is like when you had to choose between two friends…”)

TEXT-TO-WORLD

Linking story to real-world events, facts, or current happenings

Prompts to use:

  • “This is just like what we saw at [place]!”
  • “Have you seen something like this in real life?”
  • “This reminds me of something that happened in the news…”

Example: Book: Animals hibernating in winter You: “Remember when we learned that bears really do sleep all winter? That’s what’s happening in this story!”

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: Connect to immediate environment (“Look! A truck, just like we see on our street!”)
  • Ages 5-7: Connect to places you’ve visited or things you’ve learned
  • Ages 8+: Include current events, social issues, or broader world knowledge

TEXT-TO-TEXT

Linking story to other books, movies, or stories

Prompts to use:

  • “Does this remind you of another book we read?”
  • “This character is like [other character]. How?”
  • “This ending is similar to…”

Example: Book: Character learns to be brave You: “This reminds me of ‘The Cowardly Lion’ in The Wizard of Oz. Both characters discover they had courage all along!”

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: Connect to familiar stories, songs, or TV shows
  • Ages 5-7: Compare characters, problems, or settings across books
  • Ages 8+: Compare themes, author’s craft, or story structures

2. VISUALIZING 🎨

What it is: Creating mental images while reading

Why it matters: Visualization improves memory and deepens understanding

How to teach it:

Think-Aloud Examples:

  • “I’m picturing a dark, shadowy forest with tall trees…”
  • “When they describe the birthday cake, I can almost see the rainbow frosting!”
  • “I’m imagining what their house looks like based on this description…”

Prompts to use:

  • “What do you see in your mind when I read this?”
  • “Can you describe what you’re picturing?”
  • “If you were drawing this scene, what would it look like?”

Activity Ideas:

  • Draw a scene from the story after reading
  • Close eyes and imagine while parent reads descriptive passage
  • Compare mental image to book illustrations

Best Book Types:

  • Rich descriptive language
  • Books without many illustrations (chapter books)
  • Poetry

3. QUESTIONING ❓

What it is: Asking questions before, during, and after reading

Why it matters: Questions drive deeper thinking and engagement

How to teach it:

Model Your Own Questions:

  • “I’m wondering why the character made that choice…”
  • “Hmm, I have a question—how did she get there?”
  • “I’m curious about what will happen next…”

Prompts to use:

  • “What are you wondering about?”
  • “Do you have any questions about this part?”
  • “What would you like to know more about?”

Types of Questions:

BEFORE Reading:

  • “What do you think this book will be about?” (prediction)
  • “What do you already know about [topic]?” (activating knowledge)

DURING Reading:

  • “Why is that happening?” (inference)
  • “What will happen next?” (prediction)
  • “How does this work?” (clarification)

AFTER Reading:

  • “Why did the author…?” (analysis)
  • “What if…?” (extension)
  • “I’m still wondering about…” (lingering questions)

Activity: Wonder Notes Keep sticky notes handy. When your child asks a great question, write it down and stick it in the book. Review “wonder questions” afterward.


4. MAKING INFERENCES 🔍

What it is: Reading between the lines; understanding what’s not explicitly stated

Why it matters: Most meaning in text is implied, not stated directly

How to teach it:

What Inferencing Sounds Like:

  • “The book doesn’t say she’s sad, but I can tell by her face and her slumped shoulders”
  • “I think he’s nervous because his hands are shaking”
  • “They don’t say it’s morning, but the sun is rising so it must be”

Prompts to use:

  • “How is the character feeling? How can you tell?”
  • “Why do you think they did that?”
  • “What’s really going on here?”
  • “The author didn’t say it directly, but what do you think is happening?”

Clues to Use for Inferences:

  • Pictures/illustrations
  • Character actions
  • Dialogue (what they say and how)
  • Facial expressions
  • Setting details
  • What characters DON’T say or do

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: Focus on emotions from pictures (“Is he happy or sad?”)
  • Ages 5-7: Infer simple character motivations (“Why did she do that?”)
  • Ages 8+: Infer themes, character complexity, subtle meanings

5. DETERMINING IMPORTANCE 🎯

What it is: Identifying key ideas, themes, or details

Why it matters: Good readers distinguish between main ideas and supporting details

How to teach it:

Prompts to use:

  • “What’s this story really about?”
  • “What’s the most important part?”
  • “If you were telling a friend about this book in one sentence, what would you say?”
  • “What’s the big lesson or message?”

Activities:

  • Retelling: “Tell me what happened in this story”
  • Rating Moments: “Was that an important part or just a small detail?”
  • Three-Word Summary: “If you could only use THREE words to describe this book, what would they be?”

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: “What happened in this story?” (basic plot)
  • Ages 5-7: “What was the problem and how did they solve it?” (story structure)
  • Ages 8+: “What’s the theme? What lesson did the character learn?” (deeper meaning)

6. SYNTHESIZING 🧩

What it is: Putting pieces together; evolving understanding as you read

Why it matters: Reading is an active process—good readers adjust their thinking

How to teach it:

What Synthesizing Sounds Like:

  • “At first I thought X, but now I think Y because…”
  • “This is changing my mind about the character…”
  • “Oh! That explains why earlier they…”

Prompts to use:

  • “How has your thinking changed since the beginning?”
  • “What surprised you?”
  • “Did you learn something new about the character?”
  • “How did this story change what you think about [topic]?”

Activities:

  • Stop and Predict: Halfway through, predict ending. After reading, discuss if prediction changed
  • Character Change Chart: Track how character changes from beginning to end
  • Opinion Evolution: “Do you still think the same thing you thought at the start?”

Age Adaptations:

  • Ages 2-4: Simple before/after (“At the start, he was sad. At the end, he was happy!”)
  • Ages 5-7: Character growth and change
  • Ages 8+: Theme development and nuanced understanding

🗣️ THE POWER OF THINK-ALOUDS

What it is: Narrating your thinking process out loud while reading

Why it’s powerful: Makes invisible thinking visible

How to Do It:

  1. Read a passage
  2. Pause naturally
  3. Share what’s in your head using “I” statements
  4. Keep it brief (1-2 sentences)
  5. Continue reading

Think-Aloud Stems:

  • “I’m thinking…”
  • “I wonder…”
  • “I’m picturing…”
  • “This reminds me of…”
  • “I’m confused about…”
  • “I’m noticing…”

What to Think Aloud About:

  • Visualizing: “I’m imagining…”
  • Predicting: “I think what will happen next is…”
  • Questioning: “I’m wondering why…”
  • Connecting: “This reminds me of…”
  • Inferring: “I think the character is feeling…”
  • Clarifying: “I’m confused, so I’m going to reread…”

⏰ THE POWER OF WAIT TIME

What it is: Pausing 5-7 seconds after asking a question before speaking again

Why it matters:

  • Respects thinking time
  • Shows you value thoughtful answers over fast answers
  • Reduces anxiety
  • Leads to longer, more complex responses

How to Do It:

  1. Ask your question
  2. Take a breath
  3. Count slowly to 7 in your head
  4. Wait a beat more
  5. THEN respond

If They’re Still Stuck:

  • Offer a sentence starter: “Maybe it’s because…”
  • Simplify the question: “Is he happy or sad?”
  • Share your own thinking first
  • Say: “That’s a tricky one! What do YOU think?”

📖 AGE-APPROPRIATE EXPECTATIONS

AGES 2-4 (Pre-Readers)

What to Expect:

  • Short attention spans (5-10 min books)
  • Concrete thinking
  • Focus on pictures more than words
  • Love repetition

Focus On:

  • Picture walks
  • Simple predictions
  • Naming emotions
  • Text-to-self connections to immediate experiences
  • Basic retelling (“What happened?”)

AGES 5-7 (Beginning Readers)

What to Expect:

  • Growing attention spans (15-20 min books)
  • Beginning to read independently
  • Understanding cause and effect
  • Literal comprehension strong

Focus On:

  • Character feelings and motivations
  • Simple inferences
  • Predictions with reasons
  • Retelling with beginning, middle, end
  • Connections to life and other books

AGES 7-9 (Growing Readers)

What to Expect:

  • Longer books/chapters (20-30 min sessions)
  • More complex plot understanding
  • Developing empathy
  • Beginning to grasp themes

Focus On:

  • Character change and development
  • Theme identification
  • Multiple perspectives
  • Synthesizing information
  • Text evidence (“How do you know?”)

AGES 9+ (Confident Readers)

What to Expect:

  • Novel-length books
  • Abstract thinking emerging
  • Strong opinions about books
  • Complex emotional understanding

Focus On:

  • Theme and symbolism
  • Author’s craft and purpose
  • Critical analysis
  • Making connections across texts
  • Evaluating and critiquing

🎯 PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

A Simple Framework for ANY Reading Session:

BEFORE Reading:

  • Picture walk OR prediction question
  • Activate prior knowledge

DURING Reading:

  • 1-2 think-alouds (model your thinking)
  • 1-2 wonder questions (invite their thinking)
  • 1 connection (text-to-self/world/text)

AFTER Reading:

  • One reflection question
  • Optional: retelling or rating

Remember: You don’t need ALL strategies every time. Pick 1-2 to focus on per book.


📊 TRACKING PROGRESS

Signs of Growing Comprehension:

✓ Longer, more detailed answers ✓ Spontaneous questions or connections ✓ Accurate predictions ✓ Remembering and referring back to stories ✓ Talking about characters’ feelings ✓ Noticing when something doesn’t make sense ✓ Retelling with key details in order ✓ Making inferences without prompting


💡 QUICK TIPS

When Short on Time: Use these three essential moves:

  1. One prediction before reading
  2. One think-aloud during reading
  3. One question after reading (“What did you think?”)

When They’re Resistant:

  • Back off! Some days are just for enjoyment
  • Share YOUR thinking without asking them to respond
  • Wait until they’re older/more ready
  • Try different book genres—maybe they need action, not feelings

When Answers Are Always “I Don’t Know”:

  • Offer two choices to start
  • Model your own answer first
  • Look at pictures together
  • Simplify the question
  • Build confidence with easier books first

Remember: Comprehension conversations are about building thinking skills, not testing memory. Keep it joyful, keep it curious, and trust the process! 🌸


Words That Bloom | Making Reading Joyful For more resources: www.wordsthatbloom.com

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