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18 votes
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English is not normal. No, English isn’t uniquely vibrant or mighty or adaptable. But it really is weirder than pretty much every other language.
27 votes -
List of eponymous laws
11 votes -
How the 'Shetland Bus' helped Norway resist Nazi Germany – innocent-looking fishing boats delivered valuable cargo and special agents
8 votes -
Is consumerism the biggest religion?
7 votes -
Chai Tea: fight me about it
19 votes -
Mass psychosis - how an entire population becomes mentally ill
11 votes -
How did you learn to read?
Question is as stated in the title. How did you learn to read? I am re-listening to the great podcast, "Sold a Story" and it has prompted a lot of questions to myself, and now to others. So, I'm...
Question is as stated in the title. How did you learn to read?
I am re-listening to the great podcast, "Sold a Story" and it has prompted a lot of questions to myself, and now to others.
So, I'm curious, how did you learn to read and what do you remember about it? I am extra interested in people who have learned from "non-phonetic" languages, and also have a new curiousity about French, which I consider a language that does not match the spelling of its spoken and written words (if that makes sense, I'm sure that is my own bias there, as an English speaker).
My own reading experience
I can't recall how I learned to read as a baby baby, but I have a lot of pictures of me with books from a very young age.
I do remember being taught how to "read" aka how to take tests well that involved reading. For me I was taught like this:
Look at the questions following the written material. Keep those in your mind. Some of those have direct passages referenced, go to those passages.
When you are inside a paragraph, the topic sentence (first) tells you what the paragraph is about, and what point the author is trying to prove. The middle shit is usually examples and possibly useless, because the final sentence, is the conclusion, which reminds you of what the whole paragraph is about, and what you should think when you finish the paragraph.
OFC, this fits in neatly with the "five paragraph essay", which is introduction, three examples, conclusion. It's like recursive writing.
I want to talk about this way of learning to read, because I feel it really fucked with my ability to enjoy reading and my current attention span1. These days, I feel my eyes almost follow this pattern instinctively, there's a lot of going around the paragraph non-linearly, it feels like scanning for "useful" information while also "discarding" useless information. It's almost like I only know how to skim now, but I can't tell. I also have ADHD, so I'm sure this affects my methods of reading.
However, since I learned this skill very early (at least at age 9), I can't help but wonder if the natural inclination was fueled up by this method of teaching, or what.
- When I would read fictional material which has less rigidity, I also felt I was taught to figure out what the tester was going to ask about and focus on that versus actually enjoying reading. Basically all my joy for reading is messed up.
32 votes -
The Vatican secret archive
8 votes -
In April 1945 the Swedish Red Cross launched the largest rescue operation of World War II – the mission, involving the now-iconic “White Buses”, ultimately saved 15,000 prisoners
12 votes -
Did the United States almost support Nazi Germany in World War II? (No)
10 votes -
Pope Francis has died, the Vatican camerlengo announces
108 votes -
On the Resistance in Belgium platform, anyone can research resistance activities in Belgium during World War II
13 votes -
Review: Road Belong Cargo, by Peter Lawrence
4 votes -
The wax and wane of Greatest Common Factor Islam in the New Jersey suburbs
12 votes -
Museums where you can discover the world's ten oldest artifacts
22 votes -
The Charlie Rose paradox
9 votes -
How To Do Nothing: Resisting the attention economy | Jenny Odell
26 votes -
Lux Radio Theater - Tonight Or Never (1937)
2 votes -
The great big pseudoarcheology debunk
11 votes -
curaturae: write with Smithsonian's Open Access imagery (2022)
7 votes -
WordSafety: check a name for unwanted meanings in foreign languages
19 votes -
'The Gateless Gate' explained by Alan Watts (Zen koans)
9 votes -
Dreadlocks and downward dogs, Oslo's new bishop takes unorthodox approach – Sunniva Gylver is keen to show a new side to Norway's Protestant Church
12 votes -
Remembering Betty Webb: Bletchley Park and Pentagon code breaker
5 votes -
Why the island of Bornholm is Danish and not German, Swedish or Polish
7 votes -
There is no such thing as a golden age or a dark age
23 votes -
Archaeologists can finally publicly discuss the Melsonby Hoard, a collection of Iron Age artifacts that they have been excavating since a metal detectorist found it in 2021
15 votes -
Roman-era battlefield mass grave discovered under Vienna football pitch
18 votes -
How a simple tractor conquered the South Pole
7 votes -
New images reveal extent of looting at Sudan’s national museum as rooms stripped of treasures
14 votes -
Religious switching into and out of Islam
16 votes -
Conquest of the Incas
9 votes -
Danish archaeological discovery has raised questions about the origins of the iconic Sutton Hoo helmet, thought for decades to have links to Sweden
9 votes -
Book review of Robert Ferguson's fascinating history of the experiences of the Norwegians during the five years of German occupation
6 votes -
Ken Taylor and the Canadian Caper
7 votes -
Sebastian Wernicke - 1000 TEDTalks, six words
3 votes -
Europe's undeciphered prehistoric tablets
9 votes -
A Texas horned toad once survived thirty-one years in a time capsule
20 votes -
US President John F. Kennedy files expose family secrets: their relatives were CIA assets
21 votes -
McCorry's Memoirs - Era 5: Blasts From the Past (1987-1992)
2 votes -
Stoicism’s appeal to the rich and powerful
23 votes -
The failure of the land value tax in the UK
16 votes -
The hidden history of hand talk
2 votes -
The French Tutorial - Learn French for free
9 votes -
Some of the world's most famous chess pieces, the Lewis chessmen from the 12th century, are coming “home” to Trondheim this spring in a special exhibition
8 votes -
What one Finnish church learned from creating a service almost entirely with AI – tools wrote the sermons and some of the songs, composed the music and created some the visuals
11 votes -
Popping the bag: What happens when a group, once powerful, is suppressed or disbanded? Where do its members go?
12 votes -
Former Lenin Museum in Tampere, which opened in 1946 as a symbol of Finnish-Russian friendship, has rebranded amid Ukraine war
12 votes -
Beatrice twice queen of Hungary
5 votes