
Comprehensible and Compelling
The Causes and Effects of Free Voluntary Reading
- 116 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Comprehensible and Compelling
The Causes and Effects of Free Voluntary Reading
About this book
A joint effort from three thought leaders in educational research, linguistics, and literacy acquisition, this book explores the latest research that shows that compelling comprehensive input (CCI) is the baseline for all language and literacy development. It has been established that encouraging reading at all student levels supports literacy—not just literacy in terms of having basic reading and writing abilities, but in being able to perform advanced reading as well as having well-developed listening, speaking, and critical thinking skills. But what kind of reading has the most benefit for young learners? And why? Comprehensible and Compelling: The Causes and Effects of Free Voluntary Reading examines the most recent research and literacy testing results from around the world that document how reading materials must be comprehensible and compelling to bring success. It also presents research findings that show how libraries directly support literacy development, providing arguments and proof that will be invaluable in advocacy efforts for funding and program development.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Compelling Comprehensible Input
- 2. The Three Stages
- 3. What Read-Alouds Do and What They Don’t Do
- 4. Self-Selected Reading
- 5. Will They Only Read Junk?
- 6. The Complexity Study: Do They Read Only “Easy” Books?
- 7. What Have We Learned from PIRLS?
- Conclusions
- References
- Index