Although some young children can read aloud with apparent fluency, they
fail to understand fully or remember connected discourse. Much research
on reading has focused on problems at the word recognition level and
less attention has been given to comprehension difficulties. The authors
of this 1991 work observed that teachers usually monitored reading
ability by listening to children read aloud, or by using reading tests
that concentrate on word recognition skills. Thus, comprehension
problems could go unnoticed. The authors provide an introduction and an
overview of adult and child text comprehension. They then describe their
own research on children who have a specific comprehension deficit. Such
children have difficulties in making inferences from text, in using
working memory to integrate information into a coherent mental model and
in reflecting on their own comprehension. The authors relate these
findings to educational practice and make suggestions for comprehension
improvement. Psychologists and educators will welcome this presentation
of fresh, thorough research on an important topic.