segunda-feira, 22 de junho de 2026

Three Types of Reading

 Three Types of Reading

RELATED TAGS: Community Bulletin Board, Literacy, All Grades, All Subjects

More Related Discussions



“To read is to fly: it is to soar to a point of vantage which gives a view over wide terrains of history, human variety, ideas, shared experience and the fruits of many inquiries.”  - A C Grayling, Financial Times (in a review of A History of Reading by Alberto Manguel)


As educators, one of our biggest jobs is to help our students develop a love of reading. After all, without reading, as A.C. Grayling describes above, one cannot engage fully in the world.  But what if our learners have trouble accessing or reading print in the normal way? You see, 1 in 5 students in America has Dyslexia, a Learning Disability that hinders a person’s ability to decode words fluently, and ultimately read on level despite high IQ and normal comprehension.  What can we do for them?


Over ninety percent of what we teach as educators is through what we call “eye reading;” decoding and analyzing text and word patterns on a page with your eyes, which are then interpreted back into comprehension. However, there are two other types of reading that we, as educators, need to be aware of for incorporation into best teaching practices for all.

Three Types of Reading: Because there is more than just reading with your “eyes!”

1. Eye Reading

This is what 90% of us think of as “reading.”  It is what we are most tested on, and taught in schools.  Eye reading includes taking in words, sentences, and phrases through our eyes to develop meaning, which is the basis for almost all reading and ultimately comprehension for a majority of people.  Without a doubt, eye reading must be taught and focused on in early elementary grades, especially in terms of developing phonemic awareness, fluency, and decoding skills.  But what happens when a child still cannot “break the code” well beyond the elementary years?


2. Ear Reading

This is where ear reading can come into play.  When you have a student who can’t “decode” the text but is reading/comprehending at a much higher level, they can still “read” with their ears!  As Jennifer A., a Reading Specialist outside of Chicago, states to students; “You might learn better through your ears than you do taking in information through your eyes, and that’s totally fine because your brain is still doing the work with it.”

Check out the audiobooks of Learning Ally (human voice recorded) and Bookshare (digitized voice) that work to make reading accessible by providing oft-used textbooks, fiction, literature and more for K-12, college, and life-long reading.Watch the video by Sally Shaywitz at Yale Center for Dyslexia and Creativity here on the subject of audiobooks and ear reading.

3. Finger Reading

Finger reading is better known as “Braille Reading.”  We would never say to a student with blindness or vision impairment that, when reading braille, they are not actually reading, would we?  Then why do we say to students with Dyslexia and/or Learning Disability that “ear reading” is not really reading? Just like ear and eye reading, finger reading helps unlock doors for students, adults and learners who cannot access print in the normal way.

For students with Dyslexia, or a Learning Disability in Reading/Decoding, research has shown us that allowing students to “ear read” may make the difference between helping advance their comprehension growth or hinder it.  In order to fully help students with Dyslexia in the classroom, they first need to be engaged in Multi-Sensory Structured Language (MSL) program instruction to help them “crack the code.” Read a list of recommended research-based MSL programs from the International Dyslexia Association. Next, provide audiobooks to help aid in grade-level comprehension and student self-growth. The combination of MSL program instruction and audiobooks are a powerful combination for all learners to keep up with their same age peers.  


What do you think about this list? Do you incorporate the three types of reading in your classroom? Let’s discuss on twitter @LindseyLipsky or a leave comment below.

This post was created by a member of Edutopia's community. If you have your own #eduawesome tips, strategies, and ideas for improving education, share them with us.



https://www.edutopia.org/discussion/three-types-reading

segunda-feira, 27 de abril de 2026

ESSAY THE CULTURAL ANALYSIIS

 ESSAY THE CULTURAL ANALYSIIS : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

pertain - belog pertencer

 especially as pertaining to academia

Next of kin

 "Next of kin" refers to person's closest living relative, often recognized in legal, medical, and official contexts.

reading exercise comment

We have all these internet tools today, youtube, myspace, soundcloud, deezer etc. It's pretty easy to discover new bands, listen to whole albums, lots of info on google. I remember good ol'days when radio was the only source of info and music, and there was such a famine of rock info! Magazines were rare, in library, and someone had already cut the best pix off! Emoticon frown I was always in search of pix of Iommi... There was a BBC radio program Rock Seeds only on Friday nights... an hour after midnight. The awesome one, the loveliest one, 'cause I was waiting whole week for it, they were talking about news and charts, bands, biographies, festivals, and lots of music. Purple, Sabbath, Heep, Rainbow, Scorpions, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, ELO, Pink Floyd, all in little details, it was paradise. It was like a revelation for a teenager in a deep province, far from cities. There was even an option to write letters to them with questions, and I wrote few to them. It was so exciting. Simple and naif, but kids of today don't have these little pleasures. Emoticon smile

sábado, 25 de abril de 2026

Stages for Reading

 


 

Create interest in the text

•Pre-teach new vocabulary and clarify culturally specific references.

•Set the first Reading task, and a time limit for this.

•Students Read for the first time.

•Students compare their findings in pairs, followed by a brief class feedback.

•Set a 2nd more detailed Reading task.

•Make sure students are familiar with and have understood the task.

•Students compare their findings in pairs, followed by a brief class feedback. Teacher may need to refer to specific passages to clarify doubts.

***************  40 minutes   ***************

•Freer speaking or writing in the context of the reading, that possibly facilitates the students use the grammar, function or vocabulary focused on earlier.

Reading Skills

 


•skimming

•scanning

•transcoding information to diagrammatic display

•basic reference skills

•selective extraction of relevant points from a text

•extracting salient points to summarise a text

•distinguishing the main idea from supporting detail

•identifying the main point or important information in a piece of discourse

•recognising indicators of discourse

•interpreting a text by going outside it

•understanding cohesion between parts of a text through grammatical cohesion devices

•understanding relations within the sentence

•understanding the communicative value (function) of sentences and utterances

•understanding explicitly stated information

•understanding information when not explicitly stated

•deducing meaning from context

•recognising the script of a language