Lesson

Understand the Main Idea

Students learn that the main idea is the most important point a text or story is mostly about.

Understand the Main Idea

What students learn

Students learn that the main idea is the big point a text or story is mostly about. Start with Main Idea: Meet the Big Idea and ask students to listen for the words that explain why the main idea matters.

Why it matters

Finding the main idea helps readers remember what they read and talk about it clearly. It keeps students from naming only one small detail when they need to explain the whole text. Use Main Idea: Find the Story Topic to show how the topic is the first clue, not the final answer.

Learn the idea

A topic can be one word or phrase, such as dogs, rain forests, or lunch. A main idea says what the author wants readers to understand about that topic. Watch Nonfiction Main Idea: Define the Main Idea and notice that a strong main idea sounds like a complete thought.

Try it

Read a short paragraph together. Ask, "What is this mostly about?" Then ask, "What does the author want us to know about it?" Before students answer, use Main Idea: Use Title and Picture Clues to remind them to check the title and pictures for clues.

Parent guide

After reading a page, ask your child to say the main idea in one sentence. If the answer is only a topic, prompt them with, "What about that topic?" Keep practice short and friendly. You can use books, signs, recipe steps, or a short article.