Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
I guess I don't see how looking at pictures or listening to recordings really helps reading. I mean at that point you may as well include TV shows.
These are just two random links. There is a LOT of research to support the value of either one.
https://literacytrust.org.uk/news/we-release-research-review-benefits-audiobooks-literacy/
https://library.ecu.edu/networkingsummit/wp-content/pv-uploads/sites/267/2018/06/2007-LMC_Feb04_Crawford.pdf
Agree! My kid didn't read any books but improved their reading by watching anime on Netflix.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
I guess I don't see how looking at pictures or listening to recordings really helps reading. I mean at that point you may as well include TV shows.
These are just two random links. There is a LOT of research to support the value of either one.
https://literacytrust.org.uk/news/we-release-research-review-benefits-audiobooks-literacy/
https://library.ecu.edu/networkingsummit/wp-content/pv-uploads/sites/267/2018/06/2007-LMC_Feb04_Crawford.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
I guess I don't see how looking at pictures or listening to recordings really helps reading. I mean at that point you may as well include TV shows.
When you read, you create a voice in your head. When somebody else reads, they create the voice for you. either way, you take a voice and construct meaning from it.
With a graphic novel, there are literal words in there that you read. How is that not reading? Also the pictures do not just tell you what was read. They add more detail or entirely new information.
Here is what a cognitive scientist has to say about it:
http://www.danielwillingham.com/daniel-willingham-science-and-education-blog/is-listening-to-an-audio-book-cheating
Oh and Im' the PP whose son listens to audiobooks. DD has read all the same books, but not in audio format. When they discuss the books, there is no difference in the depth of their understanding that cannot be explained by a three-year age gap. If you think of reading as just decoding, sure, audiobooks don't do that. But reading isn't just decoding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
I guess I don't see how looking at pictures or listening to recordings really helps reading. I mean at that point you may as well include TV shows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
I guess I don't see how looking at pictures or listening to recordings really helps reading. I mean at that point you may as well include TV shows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Experts would disagree with you.
Anonymous wrote:We don't consider audio books or graphic novels reading.
Anonymous wrote:Senior reads constantly, all good books and current events.
7th grader reads, but not what I want her to read. Tried to push literature in our native language, and it was like pulling teeth... finally I was surprised that she liked an author who writes like Edgar Allen Poe - suspense and a bit morbid. So I guess Edgar Allen Poe is next, and maybe Hound of the Baskervilles, things like that.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in private school and he only read the 2 books that were assigned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0 .. my kid hates reading
LOL same. And yet he scores over 90% on MAP-R reading so not pushing it.