Events2Join

Building Students Reading Muscles in the Digital Age


Building Students Reading Muscles in the Digital Age

In this ILA Webinar, Gilda De La Cruz and Carol Jago will explore insights from neuroscience about the reading brain.

International Literacy Association on LinkedIn: The Reading Brain

International Literacy Association's Post · The Reading Brain: Building Students' Reading Muscles in the Digital Age · More Relevant Posts.

How to Build Students' Reading Stamina - Education Week

Instead, teachers should include stamina-building exercises as part of the daily reading their students do. And it's best to start early. Here ...

Building Your Child's Reading Muscles: A Guide to Literacy ... - WQLN

Diverse Reading Materials: Offer a variety of reading materials, including picture books, storybooks, magazines, and age-appropriate novels.

Helping Students Learn How Best to Read on Digital Devices

Tips for how teachers can scaffold instruction so that students are adept at reading text on digital devices. ... The digital world affords ...

How To Develop And Maintain Reading Habits In The Digital Era

Characterised by the pursuit of practical information, useful reading has witnessed a surge in the digital age. With abundant online resources, ...

Digital Text is Changing How Kids Read—Just Not in the Way That ...

And for older kids, coordinate with their friends' parents and teachers to reduce the amount of time spent online. Every little bit helps to ...

Building Technology Fluency: Preparing Students to be Digital ...

In middle and high school, students read aloud, deliver oral ... There are 701,905 educators who want to change the world and the way kids learn.

Improve Reading Skills in the Digital Age: 7 Powerful Strategies

Connect Reading to the Real World: Make reading relevant by showing students its indispensable value in everyday life. For example ...

Why is digital citizenship important for 21st-century students?

In this Age of Information, many use the analogy that we are bombarded with a firehose of content. So how can we teach what is a digital citizen ...

A groundbreaking study shows kids learn better on paper, not ...

For 'deeper reading' among children aged 10-12, paper trumps screens. What does it mean when schools are going digital? Wed 17 Jan 2024 ...

Step 3 – develop reading muscles | StudyHub

You have to put in the work week by week, even if you have bad days, and keep building up the stamina and speed, developing reading 'muscles'. There are ...

All about screen time and close work | My Kids Vision

In school children aged 11 to 17 years, around one-third preferred using digital devices for reading instead of conventional books, and one-quarter preferred to ...

Into Literature: Research Evidence Base - HMH

... students in asking relevant questions while reading, building capable close readers. ... literacy in the digital age: Myths and principles of digital literacy ...

Know what? How digital technologies undermine learning and ...

To learn something new, I can read about it. If I forget a fact or an event, I can look it up. Digital technologies (including computers, networking, internet ...

Building the Cognitive Muscles to Thrive in the Automation Age

How can we help schools that don't have access to all the resources that will help prepare students? • Read another piece on how students should ...

Why Doesn't Every Teacher Know the Research on Reading ...

In a whole-school literacy initiative, students learn metacognitive tools to help with reading and then apply them across content areas.

Building Literacy Muscle with Primary Sources | Library of Congress

This session shared examples of instructional strategies which use diverse and thoughtfully selected primary sources to develop understanding, ...

How Digital Natives Learn and Thrive in the Digital Age - MDPI

As a generation of 'digital natives,' secondary students who were born from 2002 to 2010 have various approaches to acquiring digital knowledge.

Reading muscles - TPT

Do your students struggle with reading comprehension? Do you find yourself at a loss for how to promote vocabulary retention?