Filter by
Subjects
Subject categories
- All subject categories (1031)
- English (208)
- Literature (208)
- (-) Reading (208)
- Prose (125)
- Modern prose (68)
- 19th-century prose (52)
- Drama (48)
- Poetry (36)
- Shakespeare for key stage 3 (25)
- Anthology poetry (19)
- Modern drama (17)
- Unseen poetry (14)
- Comparing and ordering numbers (1)
- Comparing poems (1)
- Language analysis (1)
Global tag
- (-) All global tags (739)
- Post-1900 (96)
- Gothic (43)
- Fiction (39)
- Pre-1900 (39)
- Fiction (36)
- Heritage (28)
- Tragedy (28)
- William Shakespeare (28)
- William Shakespeare (23)
- Macbeth (21)
- Macbeth (21)
- Frankenstein (14)
- Mary Shelley (14)
- Modern (14)
- Angela Carter (13)
- The Bloody Chamber (13)
- Comedy (10)
- History (10)
- Thomas Hardy (10)
- History (9)
- Ian McEwan (9)
- Margaret Atwood (8)
- Tess of the D’Urbervilles (8)
- The Handmaid’s Tale (8)
- Khaled Hosseini (7)
- Sarah Waters (7)
- The Little Stranger (7)
- The Child in Time (6)
- World War One (6)
- Bram Stoker (5)
- Charles Dickens (5)
- Charles Dickens (5)
- Charlotte Bronte (5)
- Dracula (5)
- Jane Eyre (5)
- Robert Louis Stevenson (5)
- Robert Louis Stevenson (5)
- The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (5)
- Alice Walker (4)
- George Eliot (4)
- The Color Purple (4)
- The Kite Rider (4)
- Behind the Scenes at the Museum (3)
- Enduring Love (3)
- Kate Atkinson (3)
- Seamus Heaney (3)
- The Kite Runner (3)
- The Mill on the Floss (3)
- Animal Farm (2)
- An Inspector Calls (2)
- Anita and Me (2)
- Emily Bronte (2)
- George Orwell (2)
- Great Expectations (2)
- Hard Times (2)
- J.B. Priestley (2)
- John Donne (2)
- John Webster (2)
- Meera Syal (2)
- Metaphysical (2)
- Othello (2)
- Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (2)
- Roddy Doyle (2)
- Roddy Doyle (2)
- The Duchess of Malfi (2)
- The Great Gatsby (2)
- The Hound of the Baskervilles (2)
- Wilfred Owen (2)
- Wuthering Heights (2)
- Arundhati Roy (1)
- Athol Fugard (1)
- Caryl Churchill (1)
- Chinua Achebe (1)
- Dr Lanyon (1)
- Dulce Et Decorum Est (1)
- E.M. Forster (1)
- Elizabeth (1)
- Geoffrey Chaucer (1)
- Hamlet (1)
- Harper Lee (1)
- Henry V (1)
- Heroes (1)
- Howard’s End (1)
- John Keats (1)
- John Steinbeck (1)
- Lady Macbeth (1)
- London (1)
- Lord of the Flies (1)
- Measure for Measure (1)
- Mercutio (1)
- Much Ado About Nothing (1)
- Of Mice and Men (1)
- Othello (1)
- Owen Sheers (1)
- Robert Cormier (1)
- Rupert Brooke (1)
- Silas Marner (1)
- Storm on the Island (1)
- Susan Hill (1)
- T.S. Eliot (1)
- Tennessee Williams (1)
- The creature (1)
- The God of Small Things (1)
- The Soldier (1)
- The Wife of Bath’s Tale (1)
- The Woman in Black (1)
- To Kill a Mockingbird (1)
- Top Girls (1)
- Tsotsi (1)
- Victor Frankenstein (1)
- William Blake (1)
- William Golding (1)
Resource type
Exam board
Comprehension
Reading comprehension is an important strategy to improve key stage 3 and GCSE students' reading skills and their confidence as readers. When learners understand what they've read, can decode new words (and understand morphology) and make connections with prior knowledge, they can begin to think more deeply about texts and start to analyse and interpret a writer's craft, or read with a purpose. These vital reading strategies include summarising and synthesising, inferring, making predictions, and asking and answering questions.
Our resources include a rich and eclectic mix of KS3 English and GCSE comprehension worksheets, exercises and questions on a range of unseen fiction texts and non-fiction texts, including 19th-century fiction, short stories, articles and essays. Develop students' understanding of a range of comprehension strategies they can use with these targeted comprehension resources.
Our KS3 comprehension teaching pack is an ideal introduction during the transition from primary school to secondary school for year 7-8 students, with lesson plans, text extract and comprehension questions for use in class. Our Mastering comprehension teaching pack is designed to develop year 8-9 students' reading comprehension skills and their confidence approaching an unseen fiction text, to help upper KS3 students to make the transition to GCSE English Language study.