- Read something every day
Children's books, simplified readers (Penguin), newspapers, magazines, Internet sites, novels, and much much more... - Read what interests you.
Remember that you learn better when you are having fun. - Read at the appropriate level
You want to learn new vocabulary, but you also want to understand what you are reading. If you are looking up every word, the reading is too difficult. - Review Who, What, Where, When, Why for each story you read
You can do this for almost any type of reading. Who is it about? What happened? Why did it happen? Where did it take place? When did it take place? This is very useful when you have no comprehension questions to answer. You can write or speak your answers. - Always have an English-English dictionary nearby
It is a bad habit to always rely on a translation dictionary or electronic dictionary.
Think of your English-English dictionary as your life line.
Use online dictionaries when you are using the Internet (keyword online dictionary). - Record vocabulary in a personal dictionary
- Keep this notebook separate from other work
- Record vocabulary in alphabetical order (an English address book works well because it has letters of the alphabet)
- Record the part of speech (sometimes there is more than one)
- Write a sample sentence for yourself (don't use the one from the dictionary)
- Review your personal dictionary (especially new entries) every night before bed
- Useful Reading links:
EnglishClub.com English Reading
EnglishClub.com English Vocabulary
More reading
Friday, November 26, 2010
3/4 HOW TO LEARN READING
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