The Power of Reading: Insights from the Research

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The Power of Reading: Insights from the Research

The Power of Reading: Insights from the Research

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Create an English curriculum in which children experience quality books across a wide range of literary forms which both reflect and broaden their lived experience. The best part? You can get all these benefits of reading books while enjoying some fantastic entertainment.

One of the worst things that technology has done is make us lazy. Almost everything is available with ease. We hardly make an effort to focus on solving issues or concentrate on bringing about any improvement. There are numerous ways to learn more about life, from self-help books to reading fiction. Even when you feel demotivated, you can read an inspirational biography to lift your mood. One of the great benefits of reading books is that the knowledge you gain from them can never be taken away from you. Unlike worldly possessions, your knowledge will stay with you till the end of time. 4. Vocabulary Expansion Sample Curriculum Maps to help schools develop a text-based English curriculum across the whole school.

Children who read books often at age 10 and more than once a week at age 16 gain higher results in maths, vocabulary and spelling tests at age 16 than those who read less regularly. 9 Around 5.8 million people (16% of adults) in England and Northern Ireland score at the lowest level of proficiency in literacy (at or below Level 1). 11 For example, a novel requires all of your attention for it to whisk you away to another world. And if you want to learn from a non-fiction book, it requires you to be fully present and engaged. Loneliness can cause serious physical harm: the health impacts are believed to be on the level of obesity or smoking. 18

The cool thing is that the more you read, the better your memory gets. Think of your brain like a field of grass. The more you walk down a particular path, the more beaten down it gets, and the easier it is to take that same path the next time. When you read a lot, you're beating down your memory pathways. Why is reading good for you? Reading is good for you because it improves your focus, memory, empathy, and communication skills. It can reduce stress, improve your mental health, and help you live longer. Reading also allows you to learn new things to help you succeed in your work and relationships. One study found that older adults who regularly read or play mentally challenging games like chess are two and a half times less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease. year-olds who choose to read books for pleasure outside of school are more likely to secure managerial or professional jobs in later life. 7

The Hospital: The Inside Story

With Key Stage 2 results evidencing the continuing attainment gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers, the focus on reading, including older early readers, remains at the forefront of many school improvement plans. Although this is guidance, rather than a statutory document, we know that many school and subject leaders will be focussing on how to implement the recommendations into their practice in the 23/24 academic year, and so we wanted to support you in summarising some of the key messages in the document and exploring how you might interpret the guidance to maintain or plan for positive policy and practice. Bottom line, our brains have a "use it or lose it" policy, just like our muscles. In other words, if we don't exercise our minds regularly, our cognitive abilities may decline . However, when we read every day, we can keep them strong and healthy. 3. Improve Your Focus

Don’t you sometimes feel like just getting away from all the hustle and bustle of everyday nonsense? But it’s not always cost-effective to plan a trip to get some time in solitude. No matter how proficient you are, when you read a book, you employ your memory! There are characters, sentences, and events (if you're reading a fiction book) that you need to remember for maximum fluency. Find out more about Closing the Vocabulary Gap in the Early Years (formerly known as Power Of Reading in the Early Years)Draw on expert teachers to support less experienced colleagues so that all children can make progress.

People who are single, widowed, or in poor health are among those at increased risk of feeling lonely more often. 17The upshot? Reading every day can improve your memory –it can help you learn how to store new information and recall memories more effectively. 5. Enjoy Entertainment Leaders and teachers should draw on knowledge of children’s literature and of their children’s reading development and motivations to curate selections of quality books in the school and classroom reading environments, to use in planned literacy experiences and to support children’s independent reading. The act of reading expands understanding of language, vocabulary and knowledge of the world. If children are taught to read for themselves, they can overcome early disadvantages because of these known benefits.



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