Unpacking One of the Most Misunderstood Strands of Scarborough’s Reading Rope
If you've ever stared at Scarborough’s Reading Rope and found yourself squinting at the phrase “verbal reasoning,” wondering What exactly does that mean?, you’re not alone.
We hear it all the time from educators: “I know how to teach vocabulary. I understand language structures. But verbal reasoning? That one always throws me.”
And for good reason. Verbal reasoning is one of the more abstract, complex, and frankly, under-discussed strands of the rope. It’s easy to understand why teachers struggle to translate it into concrete classroom instruction. But here’s the thing: if we’re not addressing verbal reasoning with intentionality, we may be overlooking a powerful lever for unlocking reading comprehension.
Let’s dig into what verbal reasoning really is, why it matters, and how you can support it in your classroom in ways that are both explicit and effective.
Verbal reasoning is the ability to understand, analyze, and think logically about language-based information. In other words, it’s not just about what the words say; it's about what they mean below the surface.
Think about skills like:
It’s the mental glue that connects a student’s language skills to comprehension. And it’s a huge part of how students become truly independent readers.
Dr. Judith Birsh (2005) puts it plainly: “Academic learning requires students to have considerable capacity for verbal reasoning and to be able to verbalize their verbal reasoning.” In other words, students need to:
Scarborough’s Reading Rope illustrates that skilled reading is a combination of word recognition (like decoding) and language comprehension. Verbal reasoning lives in the language comprehension half of the rope, intertwined with strands like:
These strands don’t work in isolation, but rather hey build on and bolster one another. You can’t make an inference if you don’t understand the words. You can’t draw a logical conclusion without some background knowledge to connect the dots. Verbal reasoning is where these strands converge and begin to stretch toward deeper comprehension.
This is where things get a little tricky, but also a little freeing.
Verbal reasoning is not a one-and-done lesson.
You won’t find it labeled as a standalone unit in most curriculum guides. Instead, it’s a way of thinking that needs to be embedded across your instruction.
Think about how often your standards include phrases like:
Sound familiar? All of these fall under the umbrella of verbal reasoning. And that means it has to show up everywhere in your literacy instruction, from your read-alouds to your shared reading, from independent reading conferences to writing tasks.
So let’s make it practical.
If you’re wondering where to begin, inference is a great entry point. It’s one of the clearest and most teachable subskills of verbal reasoning, and it lays the groundwork for everything else.
But let’s be real: students don’t naturally infer just because we tell them to “read between the lines.” They need to be explicitly taught how inference works.
That means modeling the thinking process:
Give prompts like: “Use your background knowledge and clues from the text to answer this question.”
This kind of scaffold not only reminds students what to do, but it also helps students start to internalize the process. Eventually, they begin to use that same language themselves.
Here’s an easy classroom tip:
When designing comprehension questions, include inference prompts that cue students to combine text evidence and background knowledge. Over time, this repetition builds cognitive habits that support deeper reasoning.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed, don’t worry. You don’t need to redesign your entire curriculum. Small instructional moves can make a big impact.
Here are a few ideas to get you started:
Push students to explain their thinking, not just give the right answer.
Say things like, “I noticed the character is sweating and checking his watch. I’m thinking he might be nervous because…”
Instead of asking yes/no or fact-based questions, try:
Yes, even early readers can practice inference! Use simple stories with clear illustrations and text-based clues to start teaching these skills early.
Verbal reasoning might not be the flashiest part of your literacy block. It’s not a worksheet or a center activity. It’s something that develops over time, through repeated, supported practice and meaningful conversations about text.
But don’t underestimate its power.
Helping students reason through what they read is what makes reading come alive. And it’s what will ultimately equip them to navigate more complex texts and ideas in the years ahead.
So if you’ve ever looked at that strand of Scarborough’s Rope and thought, “I’m not quite sure how to teach that…”, now you do.
And it starts with one powerful question:
“What makes you think that?”
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