Making Inferences - Teacher Guide

Grade 5 English Language Arts | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.5.R.1.1

FL B.E.S.T. Standard ELA.5.R.1.1

Analyze how setting, events, conflict, and character development contribute to the plot in a literary text.

Note: Making inferences is foundational to analyzing all story elements.

The Inference Formula

Text Evidence + Background Knowledge = Inference

Students must use BOTH clues from the text AND what they already know to draw conclusions.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this unit, students will be able to:

Essential Vocabulary

Term Definition Student-Friendly Explanation
Inference A conclusion reached based on evidence and reasoning An educated guess based on clues - figuring out what the author doesn't directly tell you
Text Evidence Details, quotes, or information directly from the passage The clues in the text that support your inference
Explicit Clearly and directly stated in the text Information the author tells you straight out - it's right there!
Implicit Suggested but not directly stated; must be inferred Information you have to figure out from clues - reading between the lines
Background Knowledge Information you already know from experience What you bring to the text - things you've learned from life

Lesson Sequence (5-Day Plan)

Day Focus Activities
1 Introduction to Inferences Define inference. Practice with pictures before text. Use Student Concept Worksheet.
2 Explicit vs. Implicit Sort information from passages as explicit or implicit. Model the inference formula.
3 Character Inferences Infer character feelings and traits. Practice with Practice Worksheet passages 1-2.
4 Supporting with Evidence Practice citing evidence for inferences. Complete Practice Worksheet with partner support.
5 Assessment Administer FAST Format Quiz. Review and reteach as needed.

Teaching Strategies

Strategy 1: Think-Aloud Modeling

Read a passage aloud and verbalize your thinking: "The author says [quote]. That makes me think [inference] because [background knowledge]. My evidence is [text detail]." Model this process multiple times before asking students to try independently.

Strategy 2: It Says / I Say / And So

Use this three-column graphic organizer: "It Says" (text evidence), "I Say" (my background knowledge), "And So" (my inference). This makes the inference process visible and helps students see that inferences require both text and thinking.

Strategy 3: Picture Inferences First

Start with images before texts. Show pictures and ask: "What do you notice? What can you infer? How do you know?" This builds the concept without reading barriers, then transfer to text.

Strategy 4: The "How Do You Know?" Challenge

After every inference, ask "How do you know?" or "What in the text makes you think that?" Make this a classroom habit. Inferences without evidence are just guesses - we need proof!

Common Misconceptions

Misconception: Inference is just guessing

Correction: Inference is an "educated guess" that requires evidence. Wild guesses without text support are not valid inferences. Students must point to specific text details that led to their conclusion.

Misconception: If it's in the text, it's an inference

Correction: If information is directly stated, it's explicit - not an inference. Inferences are conclusions about information that is NOT directly stated but can be figured out from clues.

Misconception: There's only one correct inference

Correction: Multiple valid inferences can be drawn from the same text, as long as each is supported by evidence. However, some inferences are more strongly supported than others.

Misconception: Background knowledge can override text evidence

Correction: Inferences must be grounded in the specific text. Prior knowledge helps interpret clues but cannot contradict what the text actually says.

Differentiation Strategies

For Struggling Learners

For Advanced Learners

FAST Test Connection

On the FAST assessment, inference questions typically ask students to:

Key Strategy: Teach students to look for answer choices that are supported by specific text evidence, not just ones that "feel right" or make sense in general.

Materials Checklist