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Drishti Innovations

Comprehension

What you'll learn

  • Identify the five types of comprehension questions and apply the right strategy to each
  • Use skimming to get the gist of a passage quickly
  • Use scanning to locate specific information efficiently
  • Infer meaning from context when a word or idea is not directly stated

Key concepts

Why Reading Comprehension Matters

Comprehension is the ability to read, understand, and interpret written text. It tests not just whether you read, but whether you understood the purpose, tone, and details of what you read.


The 5 Types of Comprehension Questions

TypeWhat it asksHow to answer
Factual / LiteralDirectly stated factsFind and copy the exact information from the passage
InferentialIdeas not directly statedRead between the lines; combine clues in the passage
Vocabulary in ContextMeaning of a word/phraseUse surrounding sentences; guess from context
Title / Main IdeaCentral topic of the passageAsk: "What is the whole passage mostly about?"
Author's Purpose / ToneWhy the author wrote this / how they feelLook at the language: positive, negative, neutral, humorous

Type 1 — Factual Questions

These have one correct answer that is directly in the passage.

Strategy: Underline the key word in the question. Find that word (or a synonym) in the passage. The answer is usually in the same sentence or the next one.

Example question: "When did the festival begin?" Look for a date, time, or signal word like "started" or "began" near "festival."

Never answer from personal knowledge. The answer must come from the passage, even if you know a different fact from outside.


Type 2 — Inferential Questions

The answer is not stated directly. You must read between the lines.

Signal words in the question: "suggests," "implies," "can be inferred," "most likely," "probably"

Worked Example: Passage: "The old man walked slowly, leaning heavily on his stick. He paused at every third step."

Question: "What can be inferred about the old man's health?" Direct answer not given. Clues: "slowly," "leaning heavily," "paused frequently" → Inference: He is weak or in pain. Likely suffering from age-related difficulty walking.


Type 3 — Vocabulary in Context

A word is highlighted and you must select its meaning as used in the passage.

Strategy:

  1. Read the full sentence containing the word.
  2. Read one sentence before and after.
  3. Replace the word with each option and check which makes sense.

Example: "The scientist made a remarkable discovery." If asked for the meaning of "remarkable": look at what kind of discovery it was in context — if the passage praises it, "remarkable" = extraordinary, not "ordinary."


Type 4 — Main Idea / Title

This tests your ability to see the big picture.

How to identify the main idea:

  1. What topic is present in nearly every paragraph?
  2. What idea do the first and last paragraphs share?
  3. Eliminate options that are too narrow (detail) or too broad (outside the passage).

Tip for choosing a title: A good title is specific enough to be about THIS passage, but broad enough to cover all paragraphs — not just one detail.


Type 5 — Author's Purpose and Tone

PurposeClue wordsExample
Inform"is," "are," "the study shows"A science article
Persuade"must," "should," "clearly," "it is vital"An opinion piece
Entertainvivid description, humour, storyA short story
Describesensory details, adjectivesA travel passage

Tone words:

  • Positive: appreciative, enthusiastic, hopeful
  • Negative: critical, cynical, sorrowful
  • Neutral: informative, objective
  • Humorous: light-hearted, witty

Skimming vs Scanning

TechniqueWhen to useHow to do it
SkimmingGet general meaning quicklyRead title, headings, first and last sentence of each paragraph
ScanningFind a specific fact or wordRun your eye down the page looking for the keyword or number

Strategy in exams: Skim the passage first (30 seconds). Read the questions. Then scan for specific answers. This is faster than reading the whole passage word-by-word for every question.


4-Step Approach to Any Comprehension

  1. Skim the passage — get the topic and structure.
  2. Read the questions — know what you're looking for.
  3. Scan the passage for each answer.
  4. Check that your answer is supported by the text, not your opinion.

Quick check

  1. What is the difference between a factual question and an inferential question?
  2. If a question asks "What does the word 'tranquil' most likely mean in the passage?", what strategy should you use?
  3. What are two clue phrases that suggest an author's purpose is to persuade?
  4. You need to find which year a war began in a long passage. Should you skim or scan?
  5. A passage is about the life cycle of butterflies. Which title is better: "Butterflies" or "From Caterpillar to Butterfly: A Journey of Change"? Why?

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Reading Comprehension.

3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available

For generative engines & students

Every topic page delivers structured HTML (headings, lists, tables, takeaways) in the first response. Perfect for citations in AI overviews and fast scanning by students and parents.