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Reading Power #2

Reading Power, Second Edition: Reading for Pleasure, Comprehension Skills, Thinking Skills, Reading Faster by Beatrice S. Mikulecky

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"Reading Power 2" is a new and updated edition of the successful student-centered reading skills textbook "Reading Power". Its unique structure, featuring four parts to be used concurrently, allows low-intermediate-level students (with a 600-word vocabulary) to develop the multiple sills and strategies involved in the reading process. OverviewExtensive Reading helps students to build reading fluency, broaden knowledge of vocabulary and collocation, and gain confidence.Vocabulary Building offers strategies for independent vocabulary learning such as dictionary work, guessing meaning from context, and learning how words work in sentences.Comprehension Skills teaches reading skills such as recognizing words and phrases, scanning for information, and making inferences.Reading Faster builds awareness of reading speed, provides strategies and exercises for increasing speed, and offers charts for tracking progress.New to the Fourth EditionAn updated Extensive Reading section with a unit on fiction and non-fiction reading, more activities for evaluating student progress, and a revised suggested reading listEnhanced vocabulary features including new "Focus on Vocabulary" exercises and an expanded Vocabulary Building sectionThere is also a Teacher Guide with Answer Key and a Test Booklet for "Reading Power 2." The "Reading Power "series also "Basic Reading Power 1" (Third Edition): Beginning"Reading Power 2" (4th Edition): Intermediate"More Reading Power 3" High-Intermediate"Advanced Reading Power 4: " Advanced

Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1986

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About the author

Beatrice S. Mikulecky

16 books48 followers
Beatrice Mikulecky holds a master's degree in TESOL and a doctorate in Applied Psycholinguistics from Boston University. In addition to teaching reading, writing, and ESL, she has worked as a teacher-trainer in the Harvard University Summer ESL Program, in the Simmons College MATESL Program, and in Moscow, Russia. She is the author of A Short Course in Teaching Reading Skills and co-author of the Reading Power series.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Salem.
231 reviews5 followers
March 24, 2016

ما هي أسرع وأفضل طريقة لإجادة اللغة الانجليزية؟

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Profile Image for Sebah Al-Ali.
477 reviews4 followers
September 30, 2011
A wonderful book for preparing material for classes. It also has speed reading passages with a chart and all.
Profile Image for Frances.
158 reviews11 followers
Read
April 24, 2011
Teachers have to introduce a lesson plan for this month's staff meeting that implements reading. This is my weapon of choice!
Profile Image for Nathan Albright.
4,488 reviews153 followers
January 1, 2021
This book is one of several books that are a part of series that seek to teach English to speakers of other languages. Most of this book consists of very workmanlike exercises that aren't particularly exciting but which seek to encourage the reader to improve their ability to understand writing in English. All of this is well and good, although it must be emphasized that the book has a very plain approach to understanding English that is focused on multiple choice and fill in questions. One of the strengths of the book is the way that the authors manage to connect a lot of different reading material together to teach lessons, as this allows the understanding of one story or excerpt to lead to further understanding of the next one and so on. I can see that a book with this approach that does a better job when it comes to presenting material in an interesting way would be able to do a very good job in providing compelling material. It is striking that this book (and the series it is a part of) focuses on written English given that this is not usually the most difficult aspect of English for others to understand.

This book is about 300 pages long and it is divided into four parts as well as additional materials. The book begins with an introduction. This is followed by an introductory section about reading for pleasure, which is admittedly undercut by the fact that it suggests some rather odd books for pleasure and, by definition, includes reading that the reader may not always find enjoyable (1). This is followed by a lengthy section in comprehension skills (2) that includes units on previewing and making predictions, scanning, making inferences, building a powerful vocabulary, learning to look for the topic, understanding paragraphs, finding the pattern of organization, and skimming. After this comes a short unit on thinking skills (3). After this comes a sizable chapter on reading faster (4), including units on fiction (with exercises on the Diamond family), biography (looking at two popular authors, J.K. Rowling and Stephen King), and nonfiction (giving reading on the Power Magazine), after which the book includes a teacher's guide and credits.

There are some obvious ambiguities about this book. For one, the book does not appear to advertise itself as being solely for speakers of foreign languages. Indeed, the book's contents, if one judges the book by its cover, appears to be focused on reading improvement as a whole, even for those who speak English normally. Yet when one looks at the material as a whole, the writing comprehension is so basic that this book is really not appropriate for those who have more than a fundamental understanding of the language. It is quite possible that there are (many) people whose reading comprehension is weak enough that this book would provide them with more reading power, but their reading would have to be at a very low level, as this book is really appropriate for only a late elementary or middle grade in terms of reading comprehension as this book really doesn't have advanced enough reading learning for high school or university level reading. It would be easy enough to recommend a book like this, except that there appears in this book to be more than the obvious interest of teaching people to read, but also the interest to encourage people to read with certain leftist or "progressive" biases, which admittedly sours me considerably on this book.
Profile Image for Steven Shaw.
22 reviews
February 14, 2024
It was consistently difficult to make the material interesting, much less effective. This situation was compounded by the necessity to adapt it to online lessons where the only barometer for progress is the honor system, so the impressions of the text are somewhat colored by this experience. For diligent students this can make an excellent training exercise if practiced regularly during the course of a year's time. However, even in the classroom, it is quite ineffective for non-elective courses with students who simply want a credit, but are indifferent to the knowledge and skills.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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