skilled reading
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Clemens ◽  
Emily Solari ◽  
Devin M. Kearns ◽  
Hank Fien ◽  
Nancy J. Nelson ◽  
...  

A trend has emerged across schools in the United States in which phonemic awareness is viewed as much more than a component of beginning reading instruction. This perspective argues that “phonemic proficiency”, evidenced by mastery with advanced tasks such as phoneme elision or substitution, is an important target for assessment and instruction well beyond initial grades. Daily phonemic awareness instruction outside of print are hallmarks of the perspective, which has influenced state policies on reading instruction. This paper evaluated the empirical and theoretical basis for advanced phonemic awareness training. Although promoted as evidence-based, proficiency on so-called advanced phonemic tasks is not more strongly related to reading or more discriminative of difficulties than other phoneme-level skills, not necessary for skilled reading, and is more likely a product of learning to read and spell than a cause. Additionally, reading outcomes are stronger when phonemic awareness is taught with print, there is no evidence that advanced phonemic awareness training benefits reading instruction or intervention, and prominent theories of reading development do not align with the claims. We conclude with implications for policy-makers and educators, and discuss how experimental research could address open questions about phonemic awareness instruction.


2020 ◽  
pp. 095679762095863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adi Shechter ◽  
David L. Share

Rapid and seemingly effortless word recognition is a virtually unquestioned characteristic of skilled reading, yet the definition and operationalization of the concept of cognitive effort have proven elusive. We investigated the cognitive effort involved in oral and silent word reading using pupillometry among adults (Experiment 1, N = 30; Experiment 2, N = 20) and fourth through sixth graders (Experiment 3, N = 30; Experiment 4, N = 18). We compared multiple pupillary measures (mean, peak, and peak latency) for reading familiar words (real words) and unfamiliar letter strings (pseudowords) varying in length. Converging with the behavioral data for accuracy and response times, pupillary responses demonstrated a greater degree of cognitive effort for pseudowords compared with real words and stronger length effects for pseudowords than for real words. These findings open up new possibilities for studying the issue of effort and effortlessness in the field of word recognition and other fields of skill learning.


Author(s):  
Ismail Baharudin

Arabic is the language of the holy book Quran for mankind. Altough the Arabic language in Indonesia is a foreign language, but for muslim should not make foreign language in his tounge. Arabic for a Muslim is the fundamental key to unclock the deepening of knowledge of the religion of Islam. With a key that he can learn the basic teachings of religion and also be able to know the basic teaching of his religion, history, science, and culture of Islam that had reached the lighthouse internasional civilization before crushed by modern civilization today.Language teaching purposes, according to its name to grow and develop language skills. Skilled language means listening, skilled reading, and skilled writing in Arabic is good and right. Arabic language teaching methods have four forms taught to students. Teaching is in Arabic in this study is teaching Istima’ (listening), teacing Kalam (speaking), teaching Qiro’ah (reading), and teaching Kitabah (writing).


Author(s):  
Kathy Rastle

Writing is a relatively recent cultural invention, and reading is a skill that requires years of instruction, dedication, and practice. My talk will consider how the nature of a writing system influences reading acquisition and skilled reading. I consider the nature of statistical regularities that characterize English orthography and show across several experiments that knowledge encoded in the skilled reading system mirrors these regularities. This analysis reveals that weaknesses in the relationship between spelling and sound give rise to powerful regularities between spelling and meaning that are critical for text comprehension. I conclude by thinking about how written language differs from spoken language and argue that these differences may be at the heart of human capacity for rapid, skilled reading.


Author(s):  
T. Yu. Myronova ◽  
◽  
O. V. Kovalevska ◽  

The article is devoted to the implementation of the methodical approach as teaching reading in foreign language to students of non-philological specialties on the basis of specific language material. It is based on the essential characteristics of reading as a type of speech activity based on the analysis of grammatical features contained in the text. The approach of teaching reading covered in the article involves managing the process of development an indicative basis for educational activities. This method has great advantages, because it helps to develop skills of creative analysis of the semantic content. Also, this method provides linking the language form and content, as well as eliminates the interference of native and foreign languages by differentiating language representations in different languages. In order to understand a grammatical phenomenon when reading a text, we must be able to know this phenomenon by its form and to connect the form with the corresponding meaning. Recognition of grammatical phenomena is based on the characteristic features of these phenomena, which symbolize their presence. Reading as a communicative process creates the following tasks before the reader: to recognize the graphic form of morphemes, words, sentences and to perceive the content. Skilled reading is characterized by the automatism of perceptual processing of the presented printed material and the adequacy of solving semantic problems that arise during the implementation of speech activity. Therefore, the way of learning passive grammar should repeat this communicative process, so the description of the phenomenon of passive grammar should be provided from the form (its features) to the disclosure of its content, so exercises should be aimed to developing automatic recognition of these features.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 1250-1258
Author(s):  
Joanna Morris

Purpose The goal of this review article is to summarize what is currently known about morphological processing in both normal and clinical populations in order to present unexplored opportunities to focus remediation efforts for children with language difficulties. Method Existing evidence was collected via a computerized database search, and the data were summarized in a narrative review. Conclusions Strong, precise lexical representations are key to skilled reading and writing performance, and the available evidence suggests that, in order to become efficient readers, English-speaking children must acquire a rapid and flexible word recognition system that can accommodate the quasiregular morpho-orthographic to semantic mappings that characterize English. Individual differences may affect how easily children are able to discover these regularities on the basis of linguistic experience and make use of sublexical morphemic constituents in visual word recognition.


Text comprehension is the essence of reading. It plays a vital role in learning especially in the acquisition, sharing, and construction of knowledge. Many researchers have highlighted that metacognitive strategies are critically important aspects of skilled reading. Metacognition is basically referred to thinking about thinking. In the field of reading, metacognitive reading strategies are those activities that make readers aware of their thinking as they engage in reading tasks. Since reading is a cognitive enterprise, readers must apply metacognitive knowledge and must invoke conscious and deliberate strategies in order to achieve comprehension of text successfully. In this study, we will present the findings of the research which concentrate on metacognitive reading strategies used by students of Politeknik Kuching Sarawak when reading English texts. From the think aloud analysis, it was revealed that comprehension problems are the result of the students’ limited strategy repertoires and poor strategy choice and comprehension monitoring. From the results of the study, we concluded that teaching metacognitive reading strategies should be taken into account in developing students’ reading comprehension


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