Language at the Speed of Sight: How We Read, Why So Many Can't, and What Can Be Done About It

Sampul Depan
Basic Books, 3 Jan 2017 - 384 halaman
In this "important and alarming" (New York Times) book, see why so many American students are falling behind in their reading skills while others around the world excel.

The way we teach reading is not working, and it cannot continue. We have largely abandoned phones-based reading instruction, despite research that supports its importance for word recognition. Rather than treating Black English as a valid dialect and recognizing that speaking one dialect can impact the ability to learn to read in another, teachers simply dismiss it as "incorrect English." And while we press children to develop large vocabularies because we think being a good reader means knowing more words, studies have found that a large vocabulary is only an indication of better pattern recognition. Understanding the science of reading is more important than ever--for us, and for our children. Seidenberg helps us do so by drawing on cutting-edge research in machine learning, linguistics, and early childhood development. Language at the Speed of Sight offers an erudite and scathing examination of this most human of activities, and concrete proposals for how our society can produce better readers.
 

Isi

The Problem and the Paradox
3
Visible Language
15
Writing Its All Mesopotamian Cuneiform to Me
31
HOW WE READ
57
The Eyes Have It
59
F u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb nrdng rsch
85
Becoming a Reader
101
Reading The Eternal Triangle
123
THE EDUCATIONAL CHALLENGES
215
How Well Does America Read?
217
The Two Cultures of Scienceand Education
247
Reading the Future
283
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
305
NOTES
309
REFERENCES
343
INDEX
363

Dyslexia and Its Discontents
149
Brain Bases of Reading
187

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Tentang pengarang (2017)

Mark Seidenberg is the Vilas Research Professor and Donald O. Hebb Professor in the department of psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a cognitive neuroscientist who has studied language, reading, and dyslexia for over three decades. He lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

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