How To Answer English Comprehension Questions
English comprehension can be one of the most frustrating parts of Paper 2. Your child reads the passage, says they understand it, and still loses marks because the answer is too vague, copied wrongly, or simply does not fit the question type. For many Singapore parents, that scene feels painfully familiar. It is late, everyone is tired, and the same question keeps coming up, “But I got the meaning, so why is it still wrong?”

That is exactly why learning how to answer English comprehension questions matters. In PSLE and secondary school English exams, comprehension is not only about understanding the passage. It is also about reading closely, recognising the question type, selecting the right evidence, and phrasing the answer in a way that can earn marks. Once students see that, comprehension usually feels less mysterious, and their answers become much sharper.
This guide focuses on practical English comprehension answering techniques for Singapore school exams, especially English Paper 2. We will look at common comprehension question types, including literal questions, vocabulary in context, own words, language use, inference questions, summary, and quote-and-explain tasks.
Key Takeaways
- Know the question type first. Many comprehension mistakes happen before writing begins. A student who misreads an inference question as a literal one may give a technically correct sentence that still earns no marks.
- Use the passage carefully, not blindly. Copying full lines rarely works unless the question clearly allows it. Strong answers select the exact evidence needed and shape it to fit the question.
- Answer with precision, not length. A longer answer is not always a better answer. One extra vague sentence can weaken what was already correct.
- Own words questions need real paraphrasing. Swapping one word is usually not enough. Students must show understanding, not just rearrange the original phrase.
- Inference questions require evidence plus thinking. If the answer is not directly stated, students need to combine clues from the passage with a sensible conclusion.
- Quote-and-explain questions have two jobs. First quote the correct phrase, then explain what it shows. Doing only one part usually means losing marks.
- Practice answer phrasing, not just passage reading. Some students benefit from guided correction through English tuition when the issue is precision rather than effort.
Start By Reading The Question Properly
A common mistake in English Paper 2 is starting with the passage instead of the question. Under exam stress, students often read a paragraph, feel they understand it, and then write the first reasonable answer that comes to mind. That is where marks slip away.
In comprehension, the examiner is not asking, “What do you know about this paragraph?” The examiner is asking something much narrower. The real task is to answer exactly what is being asked, not everything that seems related.
Identify what the question is really testing
Certain command words give the game away. Tutors often notice that students lose marks not because they cannot read, but because they do not slow down long enough to identify the task.
Here is a simple way to read the question more carefully:
For example, if the question asks, “Why was Amir reluctant to enter the room?”, a weak answer might be:

He stood outside the room for a long time.
That is only evidence. A stronger answer is:
He was reluctant because he was afraid of what he might find inside.
This answer actually deals with the “why”.
Notice the mark allocation
A 1-mark question usually needs one clear point. A 2-mark question often needs two details, or one point plus explanation. Yet many students do the opposite. They write far too much for simple questions, then give a thin answer for a higher-mark question.
A common pattern among students is poor exam judgment rather than weak English. That matters, because exam judgment can be trained.
Build the habit of spotting command words
During practice, students can underline words like “quote”, “explain”, “own words”, “two reasons”, or “which phrase”. It sounds basic, but under timed conditions, basic habits protect marks.
Another useful habit is to circle limiting words such as “one”, “two”, “mainly”, “best”, or “from paragraph 4”. These small words tell students how wide or narrow the answer should be. Missing them can lead to over-answering, under-answering, or using the wrong part of the passage.
Use The Right Technique For Each Comprehension Question Type
Not all comprehension questions should be answered in the same way. Many students get stuck because they use one answering style for everything. That usually leads to answers that are either too copied, too vague, or too incomplete.
Literal questions
Literal questions ask for information directly stated in the passage. The skill here is accurate selection.
Example question: “Where did Mei Lin hide the letter?”
Weak answer: “She was scared and hid it quickly.”
Stronger answer: “She hid the letter in the drawer under her bed.”
The stronger answer is specific and directly answers the question. For literal questions, accuracy matters more than flair.
Vocabulary-in-context questions
These ask what a word means in the passage, not what it means in general conversation. This is where students often get trapped.
If the sentence says, “His sharp reply silenced the group,” “sharp” likely means harsh or stern, not intelligent.
Weak answer: “Sharp means clever.”
Stronger answer: “Sharp means harsh or abrupt in the way he spoke.”
The key is to reread the sentence and nearby lines. Context changes meaning.
Own words questions
These are often difficult because students feel they have paraphrased when they have only changed one word.
If the passage says “the street was bustling with activity”, and the question asks for the meaning in your own words, “the street was full of activity” may still be too close. Better phrasing could be “the street was very busy with many people moving around”.
A useful check is this: Could I explain the same idea without using the original phrase? If not, the paraphrasing is probably still too weak.
Language-use questions
Some questions ask about the effect of a word, phrase, or image. These are not testing basic understanding alone. They are testing whether the student can explain how the writer creates meaning.
If a writer says, “The hallway swallowed him in darkness,” the answer should not stop at “It was dark.” A stronger response would explain that the image makes the darkness feel deep, overwhelming, and almost threatening. In other words, students should ask not only “What does this mean?” but also “What feeling or effect does it create?”
Handle Inference Questions With Evidence And Logic
Inference questions are where many marks are lost, especially in upper primary and secondary comprehension. Parents often notice this first. Their child can find facts, but once the answer is not stated directly, everything becomes shaky.
That usually does not mean the child is careless or lazy. More often, it means they have not yet learnt how to turn clues into a clear conclusion.
What inference questions usually test
Inference questions often ask students to work out what something suggests rather than what it states.
If a character keeps checking the clock, tapping his foot, and sighing loudly, the passage may never say “he was impatient”. But that is the valid inference.
Weak answer: “He looked at the clock.”
Stronger answer: “He was feeling impatient, as shown by how he kept checking the clock and sighing.”
Use evidence and conclusion together
A strong inference answer usually has two parts:
- The inferred idea
- The supporting clue from the passage
Without the clue, the answer can sound like guessing. Without the inference, it becomes mere copying.
For example, if asked, “What does this tell you about Nadia’s feelings towards her mother?” a better answer would be: “Nadia felt guilty or ashamed, because she avoided eye contact and spoke softly.”
Avoid over-inference
Some students go too far. Slight nervousness becomes “traumatised”. Mild annoyance becomes “furious”. That is where marks can be lost.
Good inference stays close to the text. It is controlled interpretation, not creative writing.
A practical way to train this skill is to ask, “Which exact words or actions made me think that?” If the student cannot point to a clue, the inference may be too weak or too extreme.
Answer Quote-And-Explain Questions Fully
Quote-and-explain questions are common, and they are often mishandled because students do only half the job.
Quote accurately and selectively
If the question says, “Which phrase shows that the old house was in poor condition?”, there is no need to copy a whole sentence if only a short phrase carries the meaning.
Weak answer: “The old house had peeling paint and broken shutters hanging off the windows.”
Stronger answer: “The phrase ‘peeling paint’ shows neglect.”
If another detail is needed, students can add it clearly. The point is to quote exactly and selectively.
Explain the effect, not just repeat the phrase
A common mistake is circular explanation.
Weak answer: “‘He exploded with anger’ shows he was angry.”
Stronger answer: “‘He exploded with anger’ suggests that his anger was sudden and intense, as though he could no longer control it.”
Strong explanations unpack the image, tone, or implication. They do not simply repeat the same idea in slightly different words.
Expect overlap with language-use questions
Questions about imagery, tone, or word choice often work in a similar way. If rain is described as “needles against her skin”, the answer should go beyond “It is painful”. A fuller explanation shows how the image makes the rain feel sharp, harsh, and uncomfortable.
That is why repeated correction matters. Tutors often notice that students improve fastest when someone points out why an answer is incomplete, not just whether it is right or wrong.
Manage Summary And Evidence-Based Questions More Effectively
Summary questions can be surprisingly hard. Students either copy too much or miss the main points entirely. Under pressure, everything in the passage can start to feel important.
Separate main points from examples
If a passage lists how a student prepared for a competition, waking early, making revision notes, asking teachers questions, and cutting down phone use are likely to be the key points. A side comment like “even though she was tired” is usually not.
Summary rewards selection, not total recall.
Paraphrase wherever possible
If own words are required, direct lifting can reduce marks.
Original passage: “He was unwilling to waste time on social media.”
A stronger summary phrasing would be: “He avoided spending unnecessary time online.”
That kind of careful rewording often makes the difference between an average response and a stronger one.
Use evidence with discipline in normal answers
Outside summary, students still need evidence. The best answers are built from the passage without sounding copied for the sake of copying.
A useful rule is simple: if the detail is exact and necessary, use it. If the question tests understanding, shape it into a proper answer. Some families find this is where guided correction helps most. If you want support with answer precision and inference skills, you can learn more about our tutors.
Check summary length and wording
Students should also pay attention to any word limit. A summary that exceeds the limit may include unnecessary details, while one that is too short may miss key points. After drafting, it helps to check whether each phrase earns its place. If a word does not add meaning, it can probably be removed.
Common Mistakes That Cost Marks In English Paper 2
Sometimes the issue is not comprehension at all. It is execution. These mistakes come up again and again in both primary and secondary English.
Giving evidence without answering the question
Question: “Why did the boy hesitate?”
“He stood at the door and looked down” may be a clue, but it is not the reason. The answer must interpret the clue and state the likely reason clearly.
Copying too much
Many students think longer feels safer. In reality, excessive lifting often hides weak understanding. Selective use of the passage is usually far more effective.
Missing one required part
If the question asks for “two reasons”, giving one excellent reason still loses a mark. If it asks for quote and explain, both parts are needed. Completeness matters.
Writing vague words
Words like “bad”, “sad”, “nice”, or “not good” are often too general. Sharper words make answers more convincing.
Ignoring pronouns and context
Who is “he”? What does “this” refer to? Many wrong answers come from tracing the wrong person or event, especially near the end of Paper 2 when students are rushing.
Not checking the final answer
A rushed answer may contain the right idea but the wrong tense, person, or detail. A quick final check can catch avoidable mistakes such as copying the wrong phrase, leaving out one reason, or answering in a way that does not match the wording of the question.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my child understand the passage but still score badly for comprehension?
This usually means the problem is answering technique rather than basic understanding. Many students follow the story but do not match their answer to the question type. This happens often with inference, own words, and quote-and-explain questions. Once they understand how marks are awarded, their scores often improve.
Should my child copy from the passage for comprehension answers?
Only when the question clearly allows direct lifting, and even then, it should be selective. For many question types, especially “use your own words” and language explanation questions, copying too closely can limit marks. Students need to know when to quote, when to paraphrase, and when to explain.
How can students improve at inference questions in English exams?
They need practice linking clue to conclusion. A useful habit is to ask, “What does this action or phrase suggest?” and then support the answer with evidence from the text. Doing corrections carefully often helps more than simply completing many passages without understanding the mistakes.
Are PSLE and secondary school comprehension skills very different?
The core skills are similar, but secondary comprehension usually expects more precise inference, stronger language analysis, and more independent phrasing. That is why some students who were coping in primary school suddenly feel stuck in Secondary 1 or 2. Often, the jump is in answer quality, not just passage difficulty.
Can English tuition help with comprehension answering techniques?
It can help when the focus is on question analysis, answer phrasing, and targeted correction. Some students do not need more worksheets. They need someone to show them exactly why one answer earns full marks and another does not. If you are exploring support, you can contact us here.

Conclusion
Learning how to answer English comprehension questions is not about guessing what the examiner wants. It is about understanding the passage, recognising the question type, and responding with precision. Literal questions need accurate retrieval. Own words questions need genuine paraphrasing. Inference questions need evidence plus interpretation. Quote-and-explain questions need both the exact phrase and a clear explanation of its effect.
For parents, that can be reassuring. If your child keeps losing marks, it does not always mean weak English overall. Very often, it means weak answering habits, and those can be corrected with focused practice. For students preparing for PSLE, secondary school exams, or O-Level-style Paper 2 work, these English comprehension techniques can make comprehension feel far less confusing and much more manageable.
If your child needs guided practice in analysing comprehension question types, phrasing answers accurately, and improving inference skills, you can learn more about our tutors.
For broader information on English learning in Singapore, you may also refer to the Ministry of Education and the Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board.




