Reading is an important skill, and in our mother tongue, we read in different ways. For example, we might skim a news article quickly in order to understand the main events. Or, we might scan the pages of a bus timetable looking for a particular time or place. If I gave you a children’s book to read, you would turn the pages quickly. On the other hand, if I gave you a contract to sign, you would read each word carefully.
However, when it comes to reading in a foreign language, research tells us that we lose most of our reading skills. We stop using skills like skimming and scanning to help us understand difficult texts. Instead, we simply start at the beginning and read every word, one after the other. Inevitably, we quickly become frustrated by difficult words.
As long as you are aware of this, however, you can use some simple strategies to avoid this trap and become a better reader.
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You are reading this book because you like the idea of learning English with short stories. But why? What are the benefits of learning English with stories, instead of with a textbook? Understanding this will help you improve your reading.
When you read books for fun, it is known as extensive reading. This is very different from how you might read English in a textbook. Your textbook contains short dialogues, which you read in detail. The aim is to understand every word. This is known as intensive reading.
Here is another way to look at it. Textbooks give you grammar rules and lists of vocabulary to learn; they try to teach you. Stories show you “real English”; they do not try to teach you. In fact, both kinds of reading are valuable and you need them both in order to learn a language effectively.
English Short Stories for Intermediate Learners, however, is designed to help you with extensive reading. As you read and enjoy the stories, you will gradually improve your understanding of how English works. If you often study with textbooks, this book will be a breath of fresh air!
Now, in order to get the benefits of extensive reading, you have to make sure you are reading regularly. Reading one or two pages may teach you a few new words, but it will not make a big difference to the level of your English. With this in mind, here is what you should have in mind when you read the stories in this book, so you learn the most from them:
This brings us to the most important point of this section: You must accept that you will not understand everything you read in a story.
It is completely normal that there are things you do not understand when you read. If you do not understand a word or a sentence, it does not mean you are "stupid" or "not good enough". It simply means you are in the process of learning English… just like everybody else.
So, what should you do when you find a difficult word? Here are a few ideas:
These steps are designed to do something very important: to train you to handle reading independently and without help. The more you can develop this skill, the better you will be at reading. And, of course, the more you can read, the more you will learn!
Remember that the purpose of reading is not to understand every word in the story. The purpose of reading is simply to enjoy the story! Therefore, if you do not understand a word and you cannot guess what the word means from the context, simply try to keep reading. Learning to be happy without understanding everything you read in English is a powerful skill to have because you become an independent and intelligent learner.