Information about Reading
This article is about the learning activity. For other uses, see Reading (disambiguation).
Young Cicero (15th c. fresco)
Reading is an active skill-based process of constructing meaning and/or gaining knowledge from oral, visual, and written text (including Braille).
It is a means of language acquisition, of communication, and of sharing information and ideas. Effective readers use decoding skills (to translate printed text into the sounds of language), use morpheme, semantics, syntax and context cues to identify the meaning of unknown words, activate prior knowledge (schemata theory), use comprehension, and demonstrate fluency during reading.
Other types of reading may not be text-based, such as music notation or pictograms. By analogy, in computer science, reading is acquiring of data from some sort of computer storage.
Although reading print text is now an important way for the general population to access information, this has not necessarily been the case historically around the world. With some exceptions, such as colonial America, only a small percentage of the population in many countries was considered literate before the Industrial Revolution.
| Part of a series on |
| GENERAL INFORMATION |
| Literacy • Illiteracy Family literacy • Functional illiteracy Braille |
| TYPES |
| Speed reading • Skimming Subvocalized • Proofreading |
| LEARNING TO READ |
|
Reading readiness • Skill acquisition
Developmental stages • Comprehension
Dyslexia • Reading disability |
| READING INSTRUCTION |
|
Reading education • Phonics
Research-based reading instruction Whole language • |
| LISTS |
|
Assessments • Publications Topics • Treatments |
Rates
- Further information: Speed reading, English language learning and teaching, and Proofreading
Rates of reading include reading for memorization (under 100 words per minute (wpm)), reading for learning (100–200 wpm), reading for comprehension (200–400 wpm), and skimming (400–700 wpm). Reading for comprehension is the essence of most people’s daily reading. Skimming is sometimes useful for processing larger quantities of text superficially at a much lower level of comprehension (below 50%).
A Sunday (public) reading in a village school. 1895 Nikolai Bogdanov-Belsky
Advice for the appropriate choice of reading rate includes reading flexibly, slowing down when the concepts are closer together or when the material is unfamiliar, and speeding up when the material is familiar and the material is not concept rich. Speed reading courses and books often encourage the reader to continually speed up; comprehension tests lead the reader to believe their comprehension is constantly improving. However, competence in reading involves the understanding that skimming is dangerous as a default habit.
Types and methods
There are several types and methods of reading, with differing rates that can be attained for each, for different kinds of material and purposes:- Subvocalized reading combines sight reading with internal sounding of the words as if spoken. Advocates of speed reading claim it can be a bad habit that slows reading and comprehension. These claims are currently backed only by controversial, sometimes non-existent scientific research.
- Speed reading is a collection of methods for increasing reading speed without an unacceptable reduction in comprehension or retention. closely connected to speed learning.
- Proofreading is a kind of reading for the purpose of detecting typographical errors. One can learn to do it rapidly, and professional proofreaders typically acquire the ability to do so at high rates, faster for some kinds of material than for others, while they may largely suspend comprehension while doing so, except when needed to select among several possible words that a suspected typographic error allows.
- Structure-Proposition-Evaluation (SPE) method, popularized by Mortimer Adler in How to Read a Book, mainly for non-fiction treatise, in which one reads a writing in three passes: (1) for the structure of the work, which might be represented by an outline; (2) for the logical propositions made, organized into chains of inference; and (3) for evaluation of the merits of the arguments and conclusions. This method involves suspended judgment of the work or its arguments until they are fully understood.
- Survey-Question-Read-Recite-Review (SQ3R) method, often taught in public schools, which involves reading toward being able to teach what is read, and would be appropriate for instructors preparing to teach material without having to refer to notes during the lecture.
- Multiple Intelligences-based methods, which draw upon the reader's diverse ways of thinking and knowing to enrich his or her appreciation of the text. Reading is fundamentally a linguistic activity: one can basically comprehend a text without resorting to other intelligences, such as the visual (e.g., mentally "seeing" characters or events described), auditory (e.g., reading aloud or mentally "hearing" sounds described), or even the logical intelligence (e.g., considering "what if" scenarios or predicting how the text will unfold based on context clues). However, most readers already use several intelligences while reading, and making a habit of doing so in a more disciplined manner -- i.e., constantly, or after every paragraph -- can result in more vivid, memorable experience.
Skill development
Several methods of teaching and learning to read have developed, and become somewhat controversial:- Phonics involves teaching reading by associating characters or groups of characters with sounds. Sometimes argued to be in competition with whole language methods.
- Whole language methods involve acquiring words or phrases without attention to the characters or groups of characters that compose them. Sometimes argued to be in competition with phonics methods, and that the whole language approach tends to impair learning how to spell.
There are cases of very young children learning to read without having been taught, such as described in the book Learning From Children Who Read at an Early Age by Rhona Stainthorp and Diana Hughes.[1] Such was the case with Truman Capote as noted in his New York Times obituary:
- After his mother's divorce from Mr. Persons and her marriage to Joe Capote, she brought her son to live with them in New York. He was sent to several private schools, including Trinity School and St. John's Academy in New York, but he disliked schools and did poorly in his courses, including English, although he had taught himself to read and write when he was 5 years old. Having been told by many teachers that the precocious child was probably mentally backward, the Capotes sent him to a psychiatrist who, Truman Capote said triumphantly some years later, "naturally classified me as a genius."
In Gerald Clarke's Capote: A Biography (1988), one paragraph describes how Capote was usually seen at age five carrying his dictionary and notepad. Conversations with Truman Capote has a passage telling how Capote taught himself to read (in a town with no library) by collecting old farm magazines and each day at six pm meeting the bus which dropped off the two newspapers from Mobile and Montgomery. Hadley Bond was a gifted child in Australia who taught himself to read by the age of one-and-a-half, had a library at age two and taught himself math at age three. There are numerous accounts of people who taught themselves to read by comparing street signs or Biblical passages to speech, plus many mentions of Lincoln teaching himself. The novelist Nicholas Delbanco taught himself to read at age six by studying a book about boats during a transatlantic crossing.
Reading assessment
Because reading draws on multiple types of knowledge, it can be tested in several different ways. Tests also vary depending on whether they are used to test children or adults. Standardized tests are normed to a large population of readers, allowing the tester to determine what is typical for an individual of a given age. For example, the average reading ability of children aged 10 years, 0 months will be 10;0. However, a more advanced eight year old might also be able to read at the 10;0 level.Reading achievement is influenced by multiple factors, and is not limited to a child's general intelligence.
Types of reading tests
- Sight word reading: reading words of increasing difficulty until they become unable to read or understand the words presented to them. Difficulty is manipulated by using words that have more letters or syllables, are less common and have more complicated spelling-sound relationships.
- Nonword reading: reading lists of pronounceable nonsense words out loud. The difficulty is increased by using longer words, and also by using words with more complex spelling or sound sequences.
- Reading comprehension: a passage is presented to the reader, which they must read either silently or out loud. Then a series of questions are presented that test the reader's comprehension of this passage.
- Reading fluency: the rate with which individuals can name words.
- Reading accuracy: the ability to correctly name a word on a page.
Effects of reading
Studies have shown that American children who learn to read by the third grade are less likely to end up in prison, drop out of school, or take drugs. Adults who read literature on a regular basis are nearly three times as likely to attend a performing arts event, almost four times as likely to visit an art museum, more than two-and-a-half times as likely to do volunteer or charity work, and over one-and-a-half times as likely to participate in sporting activities, according to Jamie Littlefield on charityguide.org[2] Literacy rates in the United States are also more highly correlated to weekly earnings than IQ. A graph showing this relationship is shown here. Reading books is generally regarded as being a relaxing past-time, while at the same time requiring the brain to process text so it can be stimulated. Because of this it is sometimes considered to cause at least a temporary increase in one's mental faculties.Lighting
A detail from Madonna des Kanonikus Georg van der Paele by Jan van Eyck.
Notes
See also
- Dyslexia
- Eye movement in language reading
- Eye movement in music reading
- Fixation
- Great Books
- Haskins Laboratories
- International Reading Association
- Literacy
- Mockingbird
- Phonics
- Photoreading
- Radio Reading Service such as 2RPH reads newspapers and magazines for the benefit of people who are unable to read for themselves.
- Reading skills acquisition
- Regression
- Skimming
- Slow reading
- Speed reading
- Subvocalization
- Time Reading Program, a book club sponsored by Time from 1961 - 1966
- Vision span
References
- National Right To Read Foundation
- National Endowment for the Arts (June 2004). "Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America" (pdf)
- Littlefield, Jamie (2006). "Promote Reading: Share Books" Retrieved June 20, 2006.
- Shaywitz, S. E. et al.: Evidence that dyslexia may represent the lower tail of a normal distribution of reading ability. The New England Journal of Medicine 326 (1992)145-150.
External links
- Haskins Laboratories: the science of the spoken and written word
- Lehrl, S., & Fischer, B. (1990) Measuring of reading rate
- Paper on word recognition at Microsoft typography site
- Sight Words Exercises
- Magazine Publishers Family Literacy Project
- A better way to learn sight words
- Free reading grade level tests and the MWIA, a test to determine dyslexia
- Children of the Code: The History and Science of Learning to Read and Comprehend
- Childrensbookradio: Popular Podcast and Directory of Children's Literature
- International Reading Association
- Reading Rockets: Reading Comprehension and Language Arts Teaching Strategies
- Bainbridge, J. and Malicky, G. 2000. Constructing Meaning: Balancing Elementary Language Arts. Toronto: Harcourt.
The activity of reading is a learned human ability to examine and grasp the meaning of written or printed characters, words, or sentences in a given language or notation.
Another activity:
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Another activity:
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Braille
Unicode range U+2800 to U+28FF
ISO 15924 Brai
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The braille
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Unicode range U+2800 to U+28FF
ISO 15924 Brai
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The braille
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Information is the result of processing, gathering, manipulating and organizing data in a way that adds to the knowledge of the receiver. In other words, it is the context in which data is taken.
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In morpheme-based morphology, a morpheme is the smallest linguistic unit that has semantic meaning. In spoken language, morphemes are composed of phonemes (the smallest linguistically distinctive units of sound), and in written language morphemes are composed of graphemes (the
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In computer science, SYNTAX is a system used to generate lexical and syntactic analyzers (parsers) (both deterministic and non-deterministic) for all kind of context-free grammars
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Schema Theory is a theory of learning. Schemata are models suggesting relationships between objects. They are learned and structure future learning. (Schemata is the plural and schema is the singular form of this word.
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Reading comprehension can be defined as the level of understanding of a passage or text. For normal reading rates (around 200-220 words per minute) an acceptable level of comprehension is above 75%.
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Fluency is the property of a person or of a system that delivers information quickly and with expertise. Fluency indicates a very good information processing speed, i.e. very low average time between successively generated messages.
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Computer science, or computing science, is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation and their implementation and application in computer systems.
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- For other uses, see Data (disambiguation).
Debt, AIDS, Trade in Africa (or DATA) is a multinational non-government organization founded in January 2002 in London by U2's Bono along with Bobby Shriver and activists from the Jubilee 2000 Drop
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literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to read, write, listen, and speak. In modern contexts, the word refers to reading and writing at a level adequate for communication, or at a level that lets one understand and communicate
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Industrial Revolution was a period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries when major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, and transportation had a profound effect on socioeconomic and cultural conditions in Britain and subsequently spread throughout the world, a process that
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literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to read, write, listen, and speak. In modern contexts, the word refers to reading and writing at a level adequate for communication, or at a level that lets one understand and communicate
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literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to read, write, listen, and speak. In modern contexts, the word refers to reading and writing at a level adequate for communication, or at a level that lets one understand and communicate
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Functional illiteracy refers to the inability of an individual to use reading, writing, and computational skills efficiently in everyday life situations. Illiteracy is the inability to read or write simple sentences in any language.
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Braille
Unicode range U+2800 to U+28FF
ISO 15924 Brai
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
The braille
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Unicode range U+2800 to U+28FF
ISO 15924 Brai
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
The braille
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Speed reading is a collection of reading methods which attempt to increase rates of reading without greatly reducing comprehension or retention. Such methods include using various psychological techniques such as chunking and eliminating subvocalization.
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Skimming has several meanings:
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- a very common form of tax evasion involves skimming cash off the top of the daily receipts of a business, converting "the take" to personal use, and thus not paying business or personal income taxes on it.
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Proofreading traditionally means reading a proof copy of a text in order to detect and correct any errors. Modern proofreading often requires reading copy at earlier stages as well.
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Reading comprehension can be defined as the level of understanding of a passage or text. For normal reading rates (around 200-220 words per minute) an acceptable level of comprehension is above 75%.
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Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that manifests primarily as a difficulty with written language, particularly with reading and spelling. It is separate and distinct from reading difficulties resulting from other causes, such as deficiencies in intelligence, a
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A reading disability is a condition in which a sufferer displays difficulty reading resulting primarily from neurological factors.
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Selected list of reading disabilities
- Asfedia
- Dyslexia
- Hyperlexia
- Scotopic sensitivity syndrome (also called Irlen Syndrome)
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Phonics refers to an instructional design for teaching children to read. Phonics involves teaching children to connect sounds with letters or groups of letters (e.g., that the sound /k/ can be represented by c,
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Whole language describes a literacy instructional philosophy which emphasizes that children should focus on meaning and moderates skill instruction. It can be contrasted with phonics-based methods of teaching reading and writing which emphasize instruction for reading and
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