MzTeachuh is a resource blog providing educational links for professional development, timely articles for special needs, ed tech and STEM, as well as interesting and amusing posts in the Fine Arts and the Humanities.
Showing posts with label reading theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading theory. Show all posts
Friday, May 29, 2015
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Oh Yeah, Let's Read!
5 Essential Skills Needed for Reading Comprehension
http://www.ncld.org/types-learning-disabilities/dyslexia/essential-skills-needed-for-reading-comprehension?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=ldorg
Beginning around third or fourth grade, your child is expected to be able to read a passage of text, understand it and answer questions about it. Here are the five skills needed for reading comprehension.
And what a gift for parents and teacher to give a student--a privilege previously withheld by tyrants to control the oppressed, a pleasure customarily reserved for the wealthy, a task exercised by the class of scholars--now available for all. Let's read.
Reading Print Versus Digital Increases Comprehension: Study
http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/reading-print-versus-digital-increases-comprehension-study_b89129
This
perceptible, direct experience gives you a mental map of the entire
text. The brain has an easier task when you can touch as well as see.
The touch, the feel of paper.
Reading Tips for Parents
http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/reading-print-versus-digital-increases-comprehension-study_b89129
A child's success as a reader begins much earlier than the first day of school. Reading, and a love for reading, begins at home. Our one-page Parent Tips offer easy ways for parents to help kids become successful readers.
Taking time for reading weaves an everlasting bond of friendship and literacy in families.
Great Early Elementary Reads book list
http://www.ala.org/alsc/compubs/booklists/greatreads/greatearlyelemreads
The Reading List: Grades 5-8
http://www.kinkaid.org/page.cfm?p=5583
Suggested Reading for High School (Grades 9–12)
http://www.phschool.com/curriculum_support/reading_list/high_school.html
The above are merely suggestions. So many choices, a lifetime of reading.
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