Teaching students to make connections when reading is valuable for multiple reasons! Not only does it increase student engagement, but it also helps support retention and comprehension.
In this post, I’ll explain three types of connections that we can teach our students to make. I’ll also provide examples of how I’d teach and prompt for each type of connection!
**This post is part of a series on reading comprehension, so if you haven’t had a chance to check out the other posts, here they are:
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There are three different types of connections, and some connections are easier for students to make than others.
1. Text-to-Self: If you’ve ever been in the middle of a read-aloud and a student interrupts (“I like pizza, too!”) after hearing something you’ve read, they were most likely actually making a text-to-self connection! A text-to-self connection is one where students are reminded of personal experiences when reading a book or passage. An event, character, or feeling in the book prompted the student to recall something similar in their own lives.
The text-to-self connection is usually the easiest to teach and utilize because it’s something that students tend to do naturally.
As students become more proficient with text-to-self connections, we want to encourage them to go deeper: “How does making this connection help you better understand the text?”
2. Text-to-Text: Exactly as it sounds, this is when students make connections between two different texts. They might notice similarities between the topics, author/illustrator, similar events in the plot, and/or characters.
Purposefully choosing texts where students can easily make text-to-text connections helps facilitate development of this skill.
3. Text-to-World: For this type of connection, students are thinking of real events or social issues as they are reading a text. Students might have learned about these topics from technology (i.e. TV or computers) or from hearing other people’s discussions.
This is presumably going to be the most difficult type of connection for students to make, especially considering their age and level of exposure to history, current events, etc.
You can make it easier for students to practice text-to-world connections by providing background knowledge via a news clip or article.
Making connections as described above comes naturally to some students, but for others, explicitly teaching and reviewing will be key.
Here are a few tips and activities:
If students are not making connections on their own, prompting can help. Here are some prompts I’d use in either a whole group or small group setting:
When thinking about making connections, we also want to consider the range of depth of each connection.
Some connections are more surface level (i.e. “My neighbor has a red car like the one in the book!”) while others hit at a deeper level (“When the boy in the book felt left out, it reminded me of a time when I was really sad because I didn’t have anyone to play with at recess.”)
Help push students to make those deeper connections when applicable.
If you’re in need of student-led, highly-effective strategies (that require NO PREP!) to teach reading comprehension, here’s another blog I wrote on that very topic: 2 High-Impact Reading Comprehension Activities that Require No Prep Whatsoever!