Imagine picking up a book written in French. How much would you understand? How about the same book in English? Even if there are parts you don't understand, you could get the gist. This is because you know enough of the words to help you comprehend.
What you know is a key to understanding as you read. Using background knowledge, or your experiences, help make connections to the text, and then comprehension increases. Good readers constantly try to make sense out of what they read by seeing how it fits with what they already know.
As you are reading, think of connections from your experience to the text. This is the foundation, that will help you understand new facts, ideas, settings, and characters. As good readers read, they think about what they are reading and consider how it fits with what they already know.
New facts or information only makes sense when we connect it to what we already know. Using prior knowledge helps make sense of the text.
As you read today in Reading Workshop, consider what you already know that helps you understand your book. What facts and information (prior knowledge) are you using to understand the text?
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