Grade 2: Context Clues
By the end of the lesson, Grade 2 students can work confidently with context clues, understanding not just how but why.
Aligned to the Grade 2 English curriculum. See the Common Core and Australian curriculum mappings.
Starter (do now)5 min
Warm up with a few quick context clues warm-ups on the board while the class settles, so every child starts thinking about the skill.
Teach it (I do)10 min
Context clues are hints in the surrounding text that help a reader work out the meaning of an unfamiliar word without stopping to look it up. Clues include a nearby definition, an example, a synonym, an antonym, or the general sense of the sentence. It is a core independent-reading strategy. Model the method clearly, thinking aloud:
- Model thinking aloud: read on past a hard word and show how the rest of the sentence hints at its meaning.
- Teach the common clue types: a definition or restatement, an example, a synonym, or an antonym signalled by words like but or unlike.
- Give a sentence with a made-up or blanked word and have students infer a meaning, then justify it from the text.
- Check the guess by swapping in the inferred meaning to see if the sentence still makes sense.
- Confirm with a dictionary afterwards, so students learn context gives a good estimate that is worth verifying.
Worked example
Work this through step by step on the board, then have the class talk you through a second one.
- The path was arid, so dry that nothing grew.
- clue: 'so dry that nothing grew' restates the word
- arid means very dry
Guided practice (we do)10 min
Do the first few questions of the practice worksheet together, one child explaining each step. Check for understanding before releasing the class to work alone.
Independent practice (you do)15 min
Students complete the practice worksheet independently while you circulate and support.
Misconceptions to watch
Circulate and look for these, they are the usual sticking points:
- Giving up at the unknown word instead of reading on for clues.
- Guessing from the word's look alone and ignoring the sentence.
- Taking a wild guess without checking it back against the text.
- Missing an antonym clue signalled by words like but, however or unlike.
Plenary (review)5 min
Pull the class back together. Ask one child to explain context clues in their own words, pose a single check question everyone answers on a mini whiteboard, and name what you will build on next lesson.
Assessment
Use the independent worksheet as the evidence. A child who can complete it accurately and explain one answer has met the objective; anyone who cannot needs the easier level and a short reteach next session.
Worksheets for this lesson
Want more depth on the method? Read the full teaching guide.