- the key which admits us to the world of thought, fancy and imagination
The eyes see the printed symbols with the aid of light rays that strike the retina. Together the eye s move in a swift and well – coordinated manner, jumping from word to word in a series of fixations. Reading takes place when the eyes pause or rest. The eyes do not really see much nor read when they are constantly in motion.
The reader identifies the combination of the letters c-a-t as cat and not as cot or cut.
a. use sight vocabulary and configuration theory
b. use context clues to determine pronunciation and meaning
c. determine pronunciation and meaning through an analysis of the structure/parts of the word consisting of its root and affixes, and inflected, or derived in form
d. relate the sound of the spoken word to its visual or graphemic symbol, a process referred to as phonetic analysis
e. use a dictionary to determine pronunciation and meaning of words resistant to analysis through the use of other skills
- these judgments are the result of critical reading and experience
- on the emotional level, reaction requires value judgments, background experience, and the ability to recreate sensory images
- one’s reaction is affected by culture.
- culture controls the quality of experience available to the reader. Thus, experience becomes the foundation of the reading process.
- they are integrated with all previous related experience
- wrong concepts are corrected and new insights are acquired
- involves applying ideas acquired to problem solving
Rate – refers to the speed of recognition, comprehension, reaction and assimilation
- vary according to the reader’s purpose and the difficulty of the materials
1. Reading is a social process. It is affected by one’s attitudes, loyalties, conflicts and prejudices.
2. Reading is a psychological process. How one feels about oneself and about others affects the reading process. Emotional stability determines one’s comfort in the reading situation. Defense mechanisms like inhibition, repression, projection, aggression, rationalization and nervousness are responses to anxiety in all types of situations.
3. Reading is a physiological process. They are skills in auditory and visual discrimination, verbal expression and eye – hand coordination.
4. Reading is a perceptual process. It utilizes cues such as combination of sounds and letters, size, shape and color.
5. Reading is a linguistic process. It requires sound – symbol relationships, understanding of intonation, stress, rhythm and tone sequences.
6. Reading is an intellectual process. It is dependent on vocabulary, memory, verbal reasoning, generalizing and critical judgment.