Reading to Improve Language Skills? Focus on Fiction Rather Than Non-Fiction - Deepstash
Reading to Improve Language Skills? Focus on Fiction Rather Than Non-Fiction

Reading to Improve Language Skills? Focus on Fiction Rather Than Non-Fiction

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Verbal Abilities Are Helpful ✨

Verbal Abilities Are Helpful ✨

Verbal abilities provide benefits in school and in one’s career.

Fostering a love for stories and fiction in children should be a high priority.

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321 reads

Reading Is A Must

Reading Is A Must

We all know that reading is good for children and for adults, and that we should all be reading more often.

One of the most obvious benefits of reading is that it helps improve language skills. A major review of research on leisure reading confirmed that reading does indeed foster better verbal abilities, from preschoolers all the way to university students. But, does it matter what we read?

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194 reads

Experiments With Genre In Reading

Experiments With Genre In Reading

In four separate studies, based on data from almost 1,000 young adults, behavioural scientist Marina Rain examined how reading fiction and non-fiction predicts verbal abilities.

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228 reads

Fiction Over Non Fiction

Fiction Over Non Fiction

They found that reading fiction was the stronger and more consistent predictor of language skills compared to reading non-fiction. This was true whether people reported their own reading habits or if we used a more objective measure of lifetime reading (recognizing real author names from among false ones). Importantly, after accounting for fiction reading, reading non-fiction did not predict language skills much at all.

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199 reads

Using SAT to measure Verbal Abilities .

Using SAT to measure Verbal Abilities .

To measure verbal abilities in three of these studies, they relied on items from the verbal section of the SAT, the standardized test used by many U.S. universities when judging applicants.

Thus, the measure of language skills employed in these studies is rather obviously tied to an important real-world outcome: admission to university.

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154 reads

Fiction Builds Language Skill

Fiction Builds Language Skill

Although it was somewhat surprising to discover that reading fictional stories predicts valuable language skills better than reading non-fiction, the repeated replication of this result across several studies increased our confidence in this finding.

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160 reads

Fiction , Reading For Joy & Language Skills Are Related

Fiction , Reading For Joy & Language Skills Are Related

People who reported they read for their own enjoyment were also more proficient in terms of language skills and this was partially explained by how much fiction they had read.

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152 reads

Experiment For Leisure Reading .

Experiment For Leisure Reading .

In a follow-up study, a collaboration between a psychology lab at York University and a lab at Concordia University led by education professor Sandra Martin-Chang, they asked 200 people about their various motivations for engaging in leisure reading.

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115 reads

Enjoying Reading Turned Beneficial

Enjoying Reading Turned Beneficial

Those who reported that they read for their own enjoyment tended to have better language skills. Related to our previous finding, this association was partially explained by how much fiction they had read

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123 reads

About Me

About Me

Hi,

I'm shafin & I'm 18 years old posting content here on various genre ( make sure you check out my profile 😊).

Make sure you post comment & react to this stash ,it keeps me motivated .

Liked my work ? Checkout my socials & follow for more ❤️🤗

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94 reads

Motivation Linked To Reading

Motivation Linked To Reading

In fact, across several types of motivation, those motivations linked to reading fiction rather than non-fiction were invariably associated with better verbal abilities. On the other hand, when a motivation was more strongly associated with reading non-fiction it tended to be either unrelated to verbal abilities or associated with worse abilities.

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79 reads

Non Fiction & Motivation

Non Fiction & Motivation

For example, people who were motivated to read in order to grow and learn focused on reading non-fiction, so this attitude was actually associated with poorer language skills.

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88 reads

It's Reading Stories Not Essays

It's Reading Stories Not Essays

Based on these five studies, the picture is quite clear: it is reading stories, not essays, that predicts valuable language skills in young adults.

But why does reading fiction have this unique advantage over non-fiction? We don’t yet exactly know, but we can rule out one obvious possibility: that fiction employs SAT words more often than non-fiction.

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80 reads

Unique Advantage Of Fiction Reading

Unique Advantage Of Fiction Reading

To investigate this possibility, we turned to several large collections of texts, containing around 680 million words in total. Words that appeared in the SAT were either less common in fiction compared to non-fiction, or the difference was so small it was negligible.

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71 reads

Fiction Promotes Language Skills .

Fiction Promotes Language Skills .

Fiction readers are therefore not doing better on SAT items simply because fiction contains more SAT words.

This means that there must be something special about reading fiction that helps promote language skills.

Perhaps the emotions evoked by stories help us to remember new words, or maybe our intrinsic interest in stories results in a stronger focus on the text. Future research will hopefully uncover the reasons for this fascinating difference between reading fiction and non-fiction.

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56 reads

Narrative Fiction Builds Strong Language Skills

Narrative Fiction Builds Strong Language Skills

Regardless of the reasons, the fact that it is narrative fiction and not expository non-fiction that helps us develop strong language skills has important implications for education and policy.

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65 reads

Rich Gets Richer 💸

Rich Gets Richer 💸

When it comes to reading, it really is a case in which the rich get richer: A great deal of past research has established that those who read more tend to get better at reading, find it easier and more enjoyable and read more as a result.

This results in a causal loop in which leisure reading reaps increasingly larger benefits for readers in terms of language skills. Remarkably, this remains true all the way from preschool to university.

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52 reads

Improved Language Skill💪 = Important Advantage 💰

Improved Language Skill💪 = Important Advantage 💰

These improved language skills in turn result in all kinds of important advantages, such as doing better at school, attaining a higher level of education and being more successful at work.

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54 reads

Leisure Reading Is Important.

Leisure Reading Is Important.

In fact, one study of over 11,000 people found that children who were better readers at age seven had a greater degree of socio-economic success 35 years later! This held true even after accounting for important factors like their socio-economic status at birth, intelligence and academic motivation. Leisure reading is important for developing language skills, which in turn are linked to key socio-economic outcomes.

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57 reads

Fiction Is A Must For Readers

Fiction Is A Must For Readers

Work from our lab, based on young adults, is beginning to clarify the association between reading and language abilities, pointing to the importance of reading fiction and not just non-fiction.

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56 reads

Children Needs More Fiction To Read .

Children Needs More Fiction To Read .

This means that it is important to foster a love for fiction in children, to promote the healthy habit of reading stories for pleasure as early as possible .

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65 reads

Political

Political

The current trend of governments prioritizing the sciences over the humanities in education runs directly counter to the evidence available. Given the benefits that verbal abilities provide in terms of success in school and in one’s career, fostering a love for stories in children should be a high priority for governments and educators.

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56 reads

IDEAS CURATED BY

hakimshafin

Curious Human. Life long learner

CURATOR'S NOTE

Why you need fiction over non fiction 💪

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