Why Use Sequence of Events Reading Comprehension Strategy
This post explains why the sequence of events reading comprehension strategy matters, especially for learners with significant cognitive disabilities and English language needs. Without a clear sense of “before, next, and after,” students often perceive a story as a jumble of snapshots rather than a coherent whole. The author reframes sequencing from a simple question about what comes next to a structured, visual process that helps students organize information logically. By teaching them to identify key events, order them using transition signals like first/next/finally, and retell with accuracy, students build confidence and clarity in comprehension. The strategy uses visual cues and scaffolded steps so that neurodiverse learners can track a narrative’s flow, strengthen retelling and writing skills, and connect reading to real-world tasks, from following instructions to managing multi-step activities. When students learn to move beyond fragmented recall to organized thinking, they deepen understanding, reduce guessing, and become more strategic readers across genres.