Education Articles

Reading Articles

Reading is the process of retrieving and comprehending some form of stored information or ideas.

The human capacity to read is accurately explained and predicted by human eye physiology and psychology. The eye is capable of taking in a certain amount of text using the vision span while fixating on the text. The sensory memory is able to hang onto the items in the vision span for a period of around 300 milliseconds. The short term memory, or working memory, can hold less material (around 4 items at a time), but for longer periods (around 30 seconds). These 4 or so items could be words, headings, or sentences, depending on the prior knowledge of the reader and the rate of reading within the well defined limits of human vision span. If the material is repeated or appropriately and meaningfully associated, it will be passed into the long term memory, which is potentially unlimited in capacity and can remain there from 10 minutes to indefinitely depending on depth of processing and subsequent recall.

A common test for children and adults is to ask them to read texts or words of increasing difficulty until they become unable to read or understand the words presented to them. This is used to determine what is called their reading age. For example, the average child of 10 will have a reading age of 10. But a 10-year-old child advanced in reading for his or her age may have a reading age of 12 or 13, i.e. may read to the level of the average 12- or 13-year-old. In a class of 12-year-olds of mixed ability, reading ages will typically vary from about 8 to about 16. Reading age is not simply a function of intelligence; a variety of teaching methods and practice techniques have been shown to have immediate effects on reading age. Reading ability tends not to increase after cessation of full-time education. The reading level of tabloid newspapers, although they are directed at adults, is around 9-12. Source: Wikipedia

31: Revisiting The SQ3R Reading Strategy (Not Rated)
By Frank Holes Jr. Many teachers have used the SQ3R reading strategy successfully for years. For new teachers, this can have a positive impact on whatever class, grade, or subject you are teaching. Reading is a vital skill in every class and every subject area, and a strategy to improve students' reading while working on specific class material is extremely beneficial. SQ3R is an instructional strategy for improving reading comprehension. It is an acronym for Survey, Question, Read, Reci

32: If You'd Like To Know Why Reading Matters (5.00/5)
By Barbara Freedman-De Vito Here Are Some of the Reasons Why Reading Is So Important for Children  Why Do We Tell Children to Read ? We're always telling children that books and reading are good for them, but have we ever really thought about why that's true ? Exactly what do older children get out of reading novels ? What do younger kids get from reading children's stories and being read to ? Does reading matter ? The purpose of this article is to say that, yes, it's true, re

33: Supporting Your Child?s Journey Toward Learning to Read: Part Two, The Kindergarten Child (Not Rated)
By: Laura Berkowitz, M. Ed ?Phonological Awareness?, ?Phonemic Awareness?If you haven?t heard these phrases before and you are the parent of a young child, you will! Although the latter refers to a slightly more advanced skill, in conversations, these are often used interchangeably. A ?phoneme? is the technical name for a sound, which is represented by a letter. An older child with good phonemic awareness will know that there are three different sounds in the word BIG, a younger child with go

34: Supporting Your Child?s Journey Toward Learning to Read: Part One, The Pre-School Child (Not Rated)
By: Laura Berkowitz, M. Ed. Most parents do more than they realize to support their child?s journey toward reading. In this article I hope to reinforce what you are already doing and add to a few more ideas to your repertoire with specific suggestions that go beyond the oft repeated: ?Read to your child.? As our children leave their toddler years and head into pre-school and then kindergarten, at some point most parents feel a twinge of anxiety as they wonder ?When will my child learn to read

35: Literacy Improvement Co-ordinator Required; Must be Able to Read (Not Rated)
By: Peter Waycik This is an interesting letter that I wrote as part of the requirements of a Reading Specialist course. If you aren't familiar with Ontario curriculum, a level three is given to a student who is meeting the expectations; a level four is given to a student who is exceeding the expectations. The letter describes the characteristics of an ideal candidate for a literacy improvement co-ordinator position. I.M. Needed Box "Read By Grade 3" Where All Children Read and W