What is Science of Reading?
New insight into reading and what has proven to enhance reading and learning.
It is a vast body of interdisciplinary research spanning cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and linguistics that explains how the brain learns to read. It proves that reading—unlike spoken language—is not a natural human instinct and requires explicit, systematic instruction.
Research demonstrates that skilled reading is achieved by developing two primary components: word recognition and language comprehension.
The focus is on five essential components of literacy instruction
Phonemic Awareness: The ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words.
Phonics: The systematic instruction of letter-sound relationships and spelling rules so students can decode words.
Fluency: The capacity to read text accurately, quickly, and with proper expression.
Vocabulary: Understanding the meanings of spoken and written words.
Comprehension: The ultimate goal of reading, which involves constructing meaning from text.
Teaching these five pillars explicitly and systematically is the key.
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