

Carson Dellosa Inferring Reading Comprehension 3rd Grade and 4th Grade Workbook, Passages and Targeted Practice Activities, Classroom or Homeschool Curriculum (Spotlight on Reading) [Frank Schaffer Publications] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Carson Dellosa Inferring Reading Comprehension 3rd Grade and 4th Grade Workbook, Passages and Targeted Practice Activities, Classroom or Homeschool Curriculum (Spotlight on Reading) Review: Teacher - Good for students Review: Na - Na











































| Best Sellers Rank | #315,473 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #275 in Children's Composition & Creative Writing Books #656 in Children's Vocabulary & Spelling Books #11,820 in Textbooks (Special Features Stores) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (58) |
| Dimensions | 8.3 x 0.13 x 10.8 inches |
| Edition | CSM |
| Grade level | 3 - 4 |
| ISBN-10 | 160996490X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1609964900 |
| Item Weight | 5.6 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | Inferring |
| Print length | 48 pages |
| Publication date | January 3, 2012 |
| Publisher | Frank Schaffer Publications |
| Reading age | 8 - 10 years |
J**H
Teacher
Good for students
M**N
Na
Na
A**R
Good for 2nd and 3rd graders
It works well for advanced 2nd or 3rd graders. It's too easy for 4th graders. Love the short passages. Not at all overwhelming for a student to get through on his or her own.
F**N
One of the best books to target comprehension
The brand new book arrived damaged and needed to be replaced, but the content is good. It is hard for my 3rd grader so we are doing grade 1-2 and build up the skill. I was concerned while reading the comment that list the examples of a kid looking at the full moon and two other kids with thought bubbles of pyramid and dinosaur. Well, the examples were taken out of context. In the first example, the two kids were looking at the moon and planets and talking about scarry-looking aliens. Then they ran off screaming after hearing noises from the trees. You can infer who they thought being in that tree. Second example, the two kids built a time machine, so their thought of dinosaur and pyramid inferred they traveled to the past instead of the future. I do see the typo/discrepancy between the comics and text. Comics showed boy thinking about pyramid and girl thinking about dinosaur. But text mentioned girl thinking about pyramid while boy thinking about Columbus.
F**M
Five Stars
great book for 3rd graders
K**N
Item exactly as posted!
Item exactly as posted!
K**Y
Not a quality product
Example: Cartoon of 2 children looking at a crescent moon and one says: "Wow! I can see the full moon!" Another cartoon story where the thought bubbles indicate the girl is thinking about dinosaurs and the boy is thinking about pyramids. The text then says Paige wants to see the pyramids and Reid wants to see how Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue. What can you infer from that?
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