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  2. Project LISTEN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_LISTEN

    The Reading Tutor has been used daily by hundreds of children in field tests at schools in the United States, Canada, Ghana, and India. Thousands of hours of usage logged at multiple levels of detail, including millions of words read aloud, have been stored in a database that has been mined to improve the Tutor's interactions with students.

  3. Sustained silent reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustained_silent_reading

    Sustained silent reading (SSR) is a form of school-based recreational reading, or free voluntary reading, where students read silently in a designated period every day, with the underlying assumption being that students learn to read by reading constantly. While classroom implementation of SSR is fairly widespread, some critics note that the ...

  4. Balanced literacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balanced_Literacy

    Guided reading is a small group activity where more of the responsibility belongs to the student. Students read from a leveled text. They use the skills directly taught during mini-lessons, interactive read aloud and shared reading to increase their comprehension and fluency. The teacher is there to provide prompting and ask questions.

  5. How doing this one thing -- for 15 minutes a day -- can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2017-03-07-read-aloud-15...

    Read Aloud, a national campaign, has released a new video (watch above!) to help get the point across -- that this is one thing parents should try to do, every single day, from the day their ...

  6. For Gen Alpha, learning to read is becoming a privilege - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/gen-alpha-learning-read...

    Joshua McGoun, a K-12 public-school teacher in Frederick, Maryland, first noticed a change in his students about 10 years ago. They began to struggle with focus. Increasingly, younger kids were ...

  7. Silent reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_reading

    A Catholic monk reading in a monastery library. Scholars assume that reading aloud (Latin clare legere) was the more common practice in antiquity, and that reading silently (legere tacite or legere sibi) was unusual. [8] In his Confessions, Saint Augustine remarks on Saint Ambrose's unusual habit of reading silently in the 4th century AD: