Books

Psychologist and Professor Aims to Remedy a Pandemic of Illiteracy


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This May Be Difficult to Read by Claire Rubman

More than 42 million Americans are functionally illiterate; they can’t follow the directions on a can of soup. Millions of students leave grade school with insufficient reading skills to adequately do their work and learn. How and why did this happen? And what does this say about the way we are educating our children?

Claire Rubman, a cognitive development psychologist and college professor, attempts to address those issues and provide solutions in her new book, This May Be Difficult to Read. She provided more insight in this recent Q&A with BookTrib.

 

Q: Why does this condition exist in the first place?

A: Look, parents want the best for their children. As their child’s first teacher, they teach them letters and sounds. But for one in five college students and 15 million high schoolers, their reading skills are inadequate. That’s awful! When we teach children to say the words out loud without focusing on meaning, we sell our children short. 

We can fix that. Parents don’t necessarily see these reading comprehension inadequacies until their children begin to fail. But there is so much that we can do to help parents to prevent this failure chain. This May Be Difficult to Read offers parents specific strategies and fun activities to promote successful reading comprehension. 

Q: Do parents have the necessary time and tools to do their parts from home in terms of supporting their childrens’ reading growth?

A: Especially today, time is of the essence for parents. You work 40+ hours per week, you cook, you clean, you do laundry and somewhere in your frenetic schedule, you find time to be your child’s first teacher. 

We have the psychological research and tools that can help all parents to optimize their interactions with their children and maximize their learning. 

Q: What are some myths about what works or doesn’t work when teaching reading to children?

A: Let me turn that around and ask you:

  1. Smaller words are easier to read than bigger words. Fact or myth?
  2. Is it cheating if your child looks at the pictures to figure out what the words say? Fact or myth?
  3. Earlier is better when it comes to learning to read. Fact or myth?

Q:  Why did you write this book and what advice can you offer parents and others about improving childrens’ reading skills at a formative age?

A: As a college professor, I have seen what failure looks like as some of my students try, but fail, to read and comprehend their textbooks. I see their comprehension failures as they try to apply the work that we are learning in the real world. I wrote this book because we have decades of research that can help parents. What is the point of doing all this research if we don’t share it. So here it is.

This May Be Difficult to Read brings this research to you with practical, easy-to-implement ideas, such as:

  • Turn your home into an engaging ecosystem where learning is a byproduct of fun.
  • Create a “need to read” in your home so that reading becomes as natural as speaking in your daily interactions. 

Learn to see through your child’s eyes and read as your child reads. The book uses 15 different research studies to allow a parent to experience the difficulties a child may encounter in the reading process. Parents can try these research experiments in their own home.

Publish Date: 11/18/2022

Author: Claire Rubman

Page Count: 254 pages

ISBN: 9798987086117

Read The Full Article Here


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