How can i get interested in reading




















Background knowledge about a topic or subject matter can help students engage in the reading. For example, if a child has never been to a farm, he or she may not understand how the setting of the barn is crucial to the plot of a story that takes place on a farm.

If a student has no prior knowledge about the roaring twenties, he or she will not fully comprehend an article about the Great Depression. Making stories and articles relevant to everyday life and current events is one more way to increase background knowledge. In order to build background knowledge before reading, teachers should consider taking students on virtual or live field trips or giving them access to real objects.

Assume that students have no understanding of the vocabulary words or content of the text. Allow them to make predictions, make connections, and ask questions before every reading experience to gauge their knowledge. Encourage readers to use the title and pictures to make a prediction about what the book is about before reading it.

During reading, students confirm their prediction and make a connection. Have no shame when you read aloud: Do accents. Take dramatic pauses. Modulate your voice, raising and lowering it to build narrative momentum. Let your children mock you. Katz and Tush. Dedicate time to reading. Make it a ritual. You can encourage reading for a child in your life — here are just a few ways: 1. Pay attention to what your child is interested in, and encourage him or her to read books on those subjects.

Set aside time to read with your child every day. Spend time reading together just before bed and take turns reading out loud with younger children. Set time aside every week for family reading night. Make reading a daily part of life, including reading road signs, recipes and directions out loud.

Set goals, such as challenging your child to read three books over Christmas break. Before you pick up a book, consider what you want to get out of reading. Some people like reading books that teach them new skills, from computer programming languages to skills for hunting or camping. Other people enjoy narratives, whether fictional or biographical, to transport them to other times, worlds, or situations. Think first about what you ultimately want to get out of reading.

You are much more likely to learn to love reading if you connect with something that seems purposeful to you. Identify what you want to read. Once you know whether you want to learn, be entertained, or something else entirely, you can narrow down types of books based on your answer. For instance, knowing you want an entertaining story alone doesn't narrow between poetry, literature, popular fiction, memoir, and other types of writing, all of which could provide an entertaining narrative.

Try doing an internet search for popular books in the area that you've chosen. This can give you a list of suggestions where you might start. Consult with your local librarian. Librarians are usually delighted to make reading recommendations.

Talk with the employees at your local bookstore. Most people who work at bookstores love reading and love books. They can be a great source of recommendations. Chatting with people who are passionate about reading might even spark a little fire of your own!

Consider the genre you think you'll most enjoy. You can narrow down reading choices even more once you've picked a general type of writing by considering the genre you want. If you've decided on popular fiction, for instance, you can choose between horror, science fiction, historical, fantasy, romance, mystery, or more realist books that take a less whimsical approach to their characters and settings. As another example, if you decide to want to read nonfiction history books, then consider the time period and subjects that most interest you.

A book about D-Day in Normandy during World War II will obviously be a very different reading experience than a book about the politics of the Roman senate around the time of Julius Caesar. Sample the genre to find writers who click with you. This can be due to when the book was written, the tone, the point of view, or a number of other reasons. If you don't like a book in the genre you think you should most enjoy, try to narrow down the reason why.

For instance, if you decide you want to read horror novels, older novels such as Frankenstein or Dracula are going to read very differently than Stephen King or Clive Barker novels. Make connections between reading and other interests. You may feel very passionately about social issues or something else. Seek out books that connect to the issues about which you are passionate or that frame the issue in a wider context. Look at print and online magazines, blogs, and other places to find other reading material.

Put down books you don't like. People sometimes feel obligated to finish a book even when they don't like it. You'll develop an aversion to reading rather than a love of it if you try to slog through a page novel that you don't like. Remember that reading is deeply personal. Reading isn't a competition. It's a deeply personal, highly subjective activity. There's no reason why you should feel guilty for not loving that award-winning novel everyone's talking about.

Read what you love, and don't compare yourself to anyone else. Method 2. Create or find a good reading environment. Find a place that is quiet, well-lit, and comfortable. You can even make a reading nook in your room. Constant distractions from the book in front of you can make it hard to concentrate, and no one likes reading the same passages over and over.

Finding the proper environment in which to read can be just as important as finding the right book for many people. Avoid high-contrast print, glossy paper, and fluorescent lighting. You don't have to read only at home, either. Check out the coffee shops, cafes, or bars in your area.

Set times to read. Try to set aside time to read every day. Even if it just starts as ten minutes on a lunch break, twenty minutes on the bus, and fifteen minutes before bed at night, that's suddenly forty-five minutes that day you've spent reading. Set a daily goal for reading time and give yourself a reward when you hit it. Eventually, you may come to find reading is its own reward.

Always carry a book with you.



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