Sequencing Events
Reading Comprehension: Sequencing Events
Sequencing Events
Sequencing Events
What you'll learn
- Sequencing means putting events in the order they happened — first, next, then, finally.
- Order words like first, next, then, after that, finally signal the sequence in a passage.
- To answer "what happened first/last/before/after" questions correctly.
- To retell a passage in the right order.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Order words
Verbal: Passages often use signal words to show the order of events.
| Signal word | Position in sequence |
|---|---|
| First | Beginning |
| Next / Then | Middle |
| After that | Later |
| Finally / Last | End |
Level 2 — Reading for order without signal words
Verbal: Even without signal words, sentences are usually written in the order things happened.
Example: "Meera watered the plants, fed the fish, cleaned her room, and then did her homework." → The four actions happened in exactly this order.
Real-life: Recipes and instructions (like assembling a toy) must be followed in the correct sequence, or they won't work.
Worked example
Passage: "Arjun packed his bag, wore his shoes, said goodbye to his mother, and left for the picnic."
What happened right after Arjun wore his shoes?
Step 1 — List the order: packed bag → wore shoes → said goodbye → left for picnic.
Step 2 — The event right after "wore his shoes" is "said goodbye to his mother".
Answer: He said goodbye to his mother.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Mixing up first and last events | Not reading the whole passage | Read start to end before answering |
| Guessing order from memory of similar stories | Not checking this specific passage | Always check the exact passage given |
| Missing an event when listing order | Skimming too fast | Count and list every event mentioned |
| Confusing "before" and "after" | Mixing direction | "Before" = earlier, "after" = later |
Quick check
- What is the first thing that happens in your morning routine?
- Read a 4-step passage from your book and list the events in order.
- What comes right after "brushed his teeth" in a morning-routine passage?
- Stretch: Write four sentences describing a sequence (like making tea) using first/next/then/finally.
Revision tip: Retell any story from your reader in your own words using first, next, then, and finally.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Sequencing Events.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice