Everything you should know about reading
What Is Reading?
Reading is
making meaning from print. It requires that we:
·
Identify the words in print – a process called word recognition
·
Construct an understanding from them – a process called
comprehension
·
Coordinate identifying words and making meaning so that reading is
automatic and accurate – an achievement called fluency
Sometimes you
can make meaning from print without being able to identify all the words.
Remember the last time you got a note in messy handwriting? You may have
understood it, even though you couldn't decipher all the scribbles.
Finally,
sometimes you can identify words and comprehend them, but if the processes
don't come together smoothly, reading will still be a labored process. For
example, try reading the following sentence:
Reading in its fullest sense involves weaving together word recognition and comprehension in a fluent manner. These three processes are complex, and each is important. How complex? Here goes?
To develop word recognition, children need to
learn:
·
How to break apart and manipulate the sounds in words – this
is phonemic awareness
example: feet has three sounds: /f/, /e/, and /t/
·
Certain letters are used to represent certain sounds – this is
the alphabetic principle
example: s and h make the /sh/ sound
·
How to apply their knowledge of letter-sound relationships to
sound out words that are new to them – this is decoding
example: ssssspppoooon – spoon!
·
How to analyze words and spelling patterns in order to become more
efficient at reading words – this is word study
example: Bookworm has two words I know: book and worm.
·
To expand the number of words they can identify automatically,
called their sight vocabulary
example: Oh, I know that word – the!
To develop comprehension, children need to
develop:
·
Background knowledge about
many topics
example: This book is about zoos – that's where lots of animals live.
·
Extensive oral and print vocabularies
example: Look at my trucks – I have a tractor, and a fire engine, and a
bulldozer.
·
Understandings about how the English language works
example: We say she went home, not she goed home.
·
Understandings about how print works
example: reading goes from left to right
·
Knowledge of various kinds of texts
example: I bet they live happily ever after.
·
Various purposes for reading
example: I want to know what ladybugs eat.
·
Strategies for constructing meaning from
text, and for problem solving when meaning breaks down
example: This isn't making sense. Let me go back and reread it.
To develop fluency, children need to:
·
Develop a high level of accuracy in word
recognition
·
Maintain a rate of reading brisk enough to
facilitate comprehension
·
Use phrasing and expression so that oral reading
sounds like speech
·
Transform deliberate strategies for word recognition and
comprehension into automatic skills
But
if reading isn't pleasurable or fulfilling, children won't choose to read, and
they won't get the practice they need to become fluent readers.
Therefore, reading
also means developing and maintaining the motivation to read. Reading is an
active process of constructing meaning. The key word here is active.
To develop and maintain the motivation to read,
children need
to:
·
Appreciate the pleasures of reading
·
View reading as a social act, to be shared with
others
·
See reading as an opportunity to explore their interests
·
Read widely for a variety of purposes, from enjoyment
to gathering information
·
Become comfortable with a variety of different written forms
and genres
So…what is reading?
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