Reading Comprehension Year 3
Looking for engaging and ready-to-teach Year 3 reading comprehension resources?
PlanBee’s English lesson packs are designed to help children develop key reading skills through exciting texts, meaningful discussion and carefully planned comprehension activities.
Whether you are teaching guided reading, whole-class reading or English lessons linked to a class novel, our Year 3 reading comprehension resources help children build confidence in retrieval, inference, vocabulary and prediction skills while saving teachers valuable planning time.
What is Reading Comprehension in Year 3?
Reading comprehension is a child’s ability to understand, discuss and respond to what they have read. In Year 3, children move beyond simply decoding words and begin to think more deeply about the meaning of texts.
As pupils progress through lower KS2, they are encouraged to:
- Retrieve information from a text
- Make predictions about what might happen next
- Explain the meaning of vocabulary in context
- Infer characters’ thoughts and feelings
- Summarise key events and ideas
- Use evidence from the text to support answers
Year 3 reading comprehension lessons often involve a mixture of fiction, non-fiction and poetry texts to help children develop a broad range of reading skills.
What Is Taught in Year 3 Reading Comprehension?
During Year 3, children begin building the more advanced reading skills needed for KS2. Teaching focuses on helping pupils understand texts in greater depth and explain their thinking clearly.
Some of the key comprehension skills taught in Year 3 include:
💫 Retrieval
Children learn to find information directly from a text by locating key facts, details and evidence.
💫 Inference
Inference skills help pupils work out information that is not directly stated, such as a character’s feelings, motives or thoughts.
💫 Vocabulary
Children explore the meaning of unfamiliar words and discuss why authors choose particular vocabulary.
💫 Prediction
Pupils are encouraged to use clues from the text to predict what may happen next.
💫 Summarising
Year 3 children begin summarising sections of text and identifying the main ideas within a story or chapter.
Year 3 Reading Comprehension Resources
Our Year 3 reading comprehension resources are designed by experienced teachers and include everything you need for engaging reading lessons.
Each lesson pack may include:
- Detailed lesson plans
- Ready-to-use slideshows
- Differentiated comprehension activities
- Vocabulary and discussion prompts
- Retrieval and inference questions
- Printable worksheets and supporting resources
These resources are suitable for whole-class reading, guided reading groups or English lessons linked to a class text.
Reading Comprehension Based on Popular Children's Books
Using high-quality children's literature is a fantastic way to improve reading comprehension in Year 3. Familiar and engaging stories help children connect emotionally with texts while developing deeper comprehension skills.
One popular option is our The Owl Who Was Afraid of the Dark Reading Comprehension KS2 pack, based on Jill Tomlinson’s much-loved story. These lessons help children explore vocabulary, retrieval, sequencing, prediction and inference through engaging reading activities.
Other popular books often used for Year 3 reading comprehension include:
- Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl
- The Iron Man by Ted Hughes
- Stone Age Boy by Satoshi Kitamura
- Fantastic Mr Fox by Roald Dahl
- Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White
- The Worst Witch by Jill Murphy
Free Year 3 Reading Comprehension Lesson
Want to try a lesson before purchasing?
Download a free lesson from our Charlie and the Chocolate Factory reading comprehension resources and discover how PlanBee’s ready-to-teach English lessons can support your classroom reading sessions.

How to Improve Reading Comprehension in Year 3
There are lots of ways to help children develop stronger comprehension skills in Year 3. Regular opportunities to discuss and respond to texts can make a huge difference to children's understanding and confidence.
Some effective strategies include:
- Reading aloud to children regularly
- Discussing unfamiliar vocabulary
- Asking prediction and inference questions
- Encouraging children to justify answers using evidence
- Exploring a range of fiction and non-fiction texts
- Using whole-class discussion to model comprehension skills
Building reading stamina and confidence through enjoyable texts is often one of the most effective ways to improve comprehension.
Why Use Whole-Class Reading?
Many schools now use whole-class reading approaches to teach comprehension skills in KS2. Whole-class reading allows teachers to model reading strategies, introduce ambitious vocabulary and encourage rich discussion around a shared text.
Whole-class reading can also:
- Reduce guided reading workload
- Support vocabulary development
- Encourage collaborative discussion
- Expose all pupils to high-quality texts
- Help teachers model comprehension strategies explicitly
Common Reading Comprehension Question Types
Year 3 reading comprehension activities often include a range of question types to develop different reading skills.
| Question Type | Example |
|---|---|
| Retrieval | Where did the character go? |
| Inference | How do you think the character was feeling? |
| Vocabulary | What does this word mean in the text? |
| Prediction | What do you think will happen next? |
| Summarising | Can you explain what happened in this chapter? |
Created by Teachers for Busy Classrooms
PlanBee’s reading comprehension resources are created by experienced teachers to help make English planning quicker and easier.
Teachers choose our Year 3 reading comprehension resources because they are:
- Fully planned and ready to teach
- Curriculum-aligned
- Differentiated for mixed-ability classes
- Easy to adapt to different teaching approaches
- Designed to build reading confidence and enjoyment
FAQs About Year 3 Reading Comprehension
What is reading comprehension in Year 3?
Reading comprehension in Year 3 focuses on helping children understand, discuss and respond to texts. Children learn skills such as retrieval, inference, prediction and vocabulary understanding.
What reading skills should Year 3 children learn?
Year 3 children should develop skills including retrieval, inference, vocabulary explanation, summarising, prediction and discussing author choices.
How do you teach inference in Year 3?
Inference can be taught by encouraging children to use clues from the text alongside their own knowledge to work out characters’ feelings, motives and thoughts.
What books are good for Year 3 reading comprehension?
Popular books for Year 3 reading comprehension include Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Owl Who Was Afraid of the Dark, Fantastic Mr Fox and The Iron Man.
How often should Year 3 children practise reading comprehension?
Regular reading practice is important. Many schools teach comprehension skills several times each week through guided reading, whole-class reading or English lessons.
What is the difference between decoding and comprehension?
Decoding is the ability to read words accurately, while comprehension is understanding the meaning of the text.
Are these resources suitable for guided reading?
Yes. PlanBee’s reading comprehension resources can be used for guided reading, whole-class reading or as part of English lessons linked to class novels.
Explore More Year 3 English Resources
Looking for more ready-to-teach English lessons?
Browse our full range of Year 3 English resources, including guided reading lessons, SPaG activities, writing units and reading comprehension packs designed to help children become confident readers and writers.

