
Lesson
What Inferences Are
Students learn that an inference is a conclusion they make from clues and what they already know.
What Inferences Are
What students learn
Students learn that an inference is a conclusion they make from clues and from what they already know. Start with so the class hears the idea in a simple, memorable way.
Why it matters
Readers do not always get every answer spelled out. Inference helps them understand characters, events, and ideas that the author leaves implied. shows that good inferences connect clues with prior knowledge.
Learn the idea
An inference is not a wild guess. It is a smart conclusion built from evidence. When the video says to read between the lines, that means the reader looks for what is suggested but not directly stated. Use and to help students hear the rule more than once.
Try it
Read a short paragraph with the child and ask, "What does the text tell us?" Then ask, "What can we figure out that is not said directly?" Have the child point to the clue first and then say the inference.
Parent guide
If the child gives a random answer, return to the clue. Ask, "What made you think that?" Keep the talk slow and concrete so the child learns to prove ideas instead of blurting them out.