Question-Answer Relationships

Question-Answer Relationships, or QAR, is a reading comprehension strategy developed to encourage students to be active, strategic readers of texts.

Page 1 of 2

Question-Answer Relationships

What Is It?

Question-Answer Relationships, or QAR, is a reading comprehension strategy developed to "clarify how students approach the tasks of reading texts and answering questions" (Raphael 1986). It encourages students to be active, strategic readers of texts. QAR outlines where information can be found "In the Text" or "In my Head." It then breaks down the actual question-answer relationships into four types: Right There, Think and Search, Author and Me, and On My Own.

For example, these are questions at each level:

In the Text

  1. Right There: Who is the main character?
  2. Think and Search: How did the character return home?

In My Head

  1. Author and Me: Would you have made the same choice the character made?
  2. On My Own: Do you know what it's like to feel jealousy?

Why Is It Important?

How Can You Make It Happen?

The levels and types of comprehension questions are described below.

  1. In the Text
    The answers are right there in the text. These types of questions are literal.

Taffy Raphael, who developed QAR, suggested the following lesson progression for teaching the strategy (1982).