When you think of a “good reader”, what kind of student do you imagine? For many teachers, a “good reader” is a student who reads directions closely and follows them in kind, or a student who is happy to read an assigned book. But is this the most accurate, and accepting, definition of a “good reader”?
Many children have a difficult time reading and following directions, or may do poorly on standardized tests, but are able to read quite well in a non-academic environment. Other children are happy to read about subjects they’re interested, but couldn’t care less about reading on a test. In order to properly identify modern “good readers”, we must diversify our expectations and standards.
Narrow characterizations fail to recognize and leverage the diverse types of reading experiences and expertise that diverse students bring to the classroom, to the page, and to the screen. And that’s a big missed opportunity.
~International Literacy Association Daily

Key Takeaways:

1
It’s possible that we don’t value different types of readers in the classroom.
2
Some students are clearly gifted readers but show mediocre performance on standardized tests.
3
We should work to value different learning styles in the classroom.

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