top of page

Improve Your Reading Skills

Page

Audio

Private Affair -
00:00 / 00:00
EPT

Reading

 

A person is limited in what they can accomplish without good reading and comprehension skills. 3. Reading is important because it develops the mind. ... Teaching young children to read helps them develop their language skills.

Relatively all humans learn to talk before learning to read; however, reading and writing skills develop together.  As children, we’re all taught to read out loud. When you vocalize the words you read, they are remembered together with their meanings. It also builds concentration in young children.

_________________________________________

In which areas of our lives is reading important?

  • It helps you to discover new things by enabling you to educate yourself in any area of life you are interested in and to do your own research and thinking.

  • It helps develop the mind and imagination and the creative side of a person.

  • It helps to improve (vocabulary and spelling) communication both written and spoken.

  • It plays an important part in building a good self-image.

  • It is a function that is necessary in today’s society.

 

Site Title

The Benefits of

Improving Your Reading Skills

Reading builds knowledge and allows us to be the inquisitive knowledge seekers that we ought to be.

Not only does it help students tremendously when they need to study for tests and exams, but also it  improves writing skills. Reading well allows one to spend less time figuring out the words, and it increases speed and concentration.

You can improve your concentration with systematic breaks in between reading and by avoiding regression. Regression is a very bad habit, and we all do it.

Regression means reading the same text immediately after just reading it. Again and again. This slows down our reading activity and has the opposite effect of efficiency. Focus is essential, and this is where I will highlight, without going into detail again, the importance of reading when it’s quiet.

Because our brains are adaptable and capable of continuous development, it may even be possible for reading to increase one’s IQ.

Perhaps reading a lot and expanding our knowledge is the indirect result of an increased IQ. Who knows? When I was doing research, I thought, “It’s great to learn all this new stuff, but how about doing a little survey for fun?”

I asked ten adults between the ages of 23 and 31 how often they read, if they think they need to improve their reading skills, and why they believe they need to improve or not.

Because the answers were so different and interesting to read, I thought it would be awesome to share the responses individually instead of creating statistics. Here’s what they all had to say:

 

Schedule: Monday - Friday

(1 Hour Lesson - Each Week)

 

Appointment Options:

(1-Hour) - 10:30 am to 11:30 pm

(1-Hour) - 11:30 am to 12:30 pm

 

(1-Hour) - 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm

(1-Hour) -   1:30 pm to 2:30 pm

 

(1-Hour) - 2:30 pm to 3:30 pm

(1-Hour) - 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm

bottom of page