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Strategies for Reading Success Material provided by Mascot Press Written by Steve and Dave Jantzen

Strategies for Reading Success Material provided by Mascot Press Written by Steve and Dave Jantzen. Power Point By Joe Crawley. Overview of Your Handouts. 100 Ways to Get Your Kids to Love Reading by Phyliss Hunter. Reading Benchmarks for High School Students. Comments by Steve Janzen.

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Strategies for Reading Success Material provided by Mascot Press Written by Steve and Dave Jantzen

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  1. Strategies for Reading SuccessMaterial provided by Mascot Press Written by Steve and Dave Jantzen Power Point By Joe Crawley

  2. Overview of Your Handouts • 100 Ways to Get Your Kids to Love Reading by Phyliss Hunter • Reading Benchmarks for High School Students. Comments by Steve Janzen • Strategies for Reading Success by Steve Janzen

  3. Prepares your mind for where the text is headed Look Ahead look only at the headings and illustrations on one page then to the next, read only the title, headings and subheadings in bold type Like looking at a road map before driving off in the car.

  4. Don’t expect to remember what you read unless you go back over it. Look Backhaving read the passage, go back to the beginning , study its heading and subheadings one more time what was the author trying to tell me Like painting a house, a second coat is often needed.

  5. How does the end of the story connect to the beginning. Jump to The Endread the first paragraph then the last paragraph then read all Boredom is converted to real interest.

  6. you will actively seek and answer to own your question Ask Questionsmake yourself curious by posing a question about an article’s title and subtitle You become curious, interested --not bored.

  7. Your mind becomes more curious, creative, and and actively engaged. Make a mental moviewhile reading, make a mental movie in your mind example you are the director A thinking mind asks questions

  8. The author decides where he wants to lead -- you must try to follow. Notice the Organizationbe aware of choices an author makes for organizing - what person I, he etc. first event to last event, or last to first, close up to broad, broad to close up Makes you more alert and aware as you read.

  9. Skilled readers say “ I didn’t get that let me read it one more time. If you get lost go back.When you read a paragraph that makes no sense, go back an reread it. Unskilled readers think they must understand everything on the first try

  10. Like speed bumps in a parking lot get over them and keep on going. Keep reading get past the vocabulary bumps”whenever you reach a string fo unfamiliar words do not stop -do not allow yourself to become frustrated. Draw on your determination to understand the paragraph as a whole

  11. Be patient with yourself and the author Take a short breakif frustration on a reading test begins to jangle your nerves stop and rest --look at the ceiling -etc Take a break if necessary but keep reading to the end.

  12. Some strategies may help more than others. Make a plan on which strategies work for you. Take Controlcome into a test with a plan based on your own strengths as reader and thinker. Remember them and use them.

  13. Strategies for Reading SuccessMaterial provided by Mascot Press Written by Steve and Dave Jantzen Thank you. Are there any questions? Joe Crawley

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