Reading Comprehension

Understanding Reading Comprehension Difficulties in Children

Many parents notice a similar pattern when their child reads. Their child may be able to read words accurately and even read aloud smoothly. However, when asked to explain what the passage means or answer comprehension questions, the child may struggle. Homework may take longer than expected, comprehension questions may feel confusing, and written answers may not reflect what the child seems to understand verbally. Reading comprehension difficulties occur when children can recognise written words but experience difficulty understanding, organising or interpreting the meaning of what they read.

What Reading Comprehension Involves

Understanding written text requires several learning processes working together. Children must recognise words, understand vocabulary, connect ideas across sentences and remember information while continuing to read. Reading comprehension typically involves:

1

Understanding vocabulary within the passage

2

Connecting ideas across sentences

3

Remembering information while reading

4

Making inferences about meaning

5

Interpreting comprehension questions

Difficulty Understanding Longer Sentences

Some children understand individual words and short sentences well. However, when sentences contain several ideas linked together, the meaning becomes more difficult to follow. To understand longer sentences, readers must remember earlier parts of the sentence while processing new information and connecting the ideas logically. Some children may also find it difficult to understand longer sentences that contain several linked ideas. Even when individual words are familiar, integrating the meaning across the sentence can become challenging.

For example, a child may easily understand a short sentence such as: “The boy finished his homework.” However, a more complex sentence such as: “Although the boy finished his homework early, he could not go out to play because it started to rain” requires the reader to connect several ideas together to understand the full meaning.

Simple Sentence

“The boy finished his homework.”

One idea — easy to follow.

Complex Sentence

“Although the boy finished his homework early, he could not go out to play because it started to rain.”

Several linked ideas — requires connecting meaning across the whole sentence.

Common Signs of Reading Comprehension Difficulties

  • Reads smoothly but cannot explain what the passage means
  • Struggles to answer comprehension questions
  • Provides short or incomplete written answers
  • Misunderstands written instructions
  • Loses track of meaning when sentences become longer or more complex

How Reading Comprehension Difficulties Affect School Learning

Reading comprehension plays a central role in school learning. Students are expected to understand written information across many subjects. When comprehension becomes difficult, children may appear to struggle across several subjects even though the underlying difficulty relates to understanding written information.

English

Comprehension passages

Science

Explanations and textbooks

Mathematics

Word problems

Social Studies

Reading materials

Related Parent Guides

The following guides explain common situations where reading comprehension difficulties appear in school and how parents can better understand these patterns.