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How to use Think-Alouds to teach reading comprehension

Teaching students to maintain an internal dialogue with the author and the text while reading is vitally important. “Talk to the text” significantly increases reader comprehension and also promotes retention. However, this is not a skill gained by osmosis. It requires effective modeling using the Think-Aloud strategy.

Good readers are adept at practicing many metacognitive strategies. That’s a great word that means “thinking about thinking.” Research shows that 50% of reading comprehension is based on what the reader brings to the text in the form of background knowledge and self-talk. Students who practice the self-management strategies modeled by teachers using Think-Alouds have better reading comprehension than those who don’t.

Here’s how to set up an effective Think-Aloud with your students:

1. Select a short reading with a beginning, middle, and end.

2. Tell students that they are about to enter a strange new world, that is the world of your thoughts as a reader. Tell them that your thoughts will not be the same as theirs.

3. Tell them that reading is not just saying words; it is to make sense of what the author has written. Tell them that they can improve their reading comprehension.

4. Start reading the text for a few lines, and then modify your voice (raise the pitch, lower the volume, or use an accent) to model what you’re thinking. Stop and explain what the voice alteration meant and keep this voice alteration constant throughout the Think-Aloud.

5. Keep your thoughts concise and focused as you read. Do not ramble with personal anecdotes. How much more in the text than in your personal connection with the text.

6. Don’t overdo the number of Think-Aloud thoughts. Once every paragraph or two is correct. Don’t interrupt the flow of reading and lose sight of the textual meaning.

7. Talk to the text and the author.

8. Ask students if they think they understood the text better due to their verbalized thoughts than by reading passively without active thoughts. Your answer will be “Yes”, if you have performed an effective Think Aloud.

9. Have students practice their own Think-Alouds in pairs.

10. Repeat Think-Alouds often with narrative and expository texts.