Improving Reading Skills
Paperback Engels 2012 7e druk 9780073407319Samenvatting
Now in its 7th edition, Improving Reading Skills features a wide variety of carefully chosen readings that engage, encourage, and challenge students. Ideal for introductory and intermediate developmental reading courses, this new edition has been thoroughly revised and now includes two new parts, expanded part introductions, an even broader range of levels for the reading selections, increased emphasis on annotating, paragraphing, and summarizing, and a new section in part five.
Specificaties
Lezersrecensies
Inhoudsopgave
> List of Facts or Details <h4> Examples <h4> Reasons - Cause and Effect <h4> Description of a Process <h4> Contrast<h3>Transitional Elements<h3>Some Final Considerations<h4>21. Debra Dickerson, Raising Cain<blockquote>. . . I just mean to say that children primarily meant to me that I’d always be taking care of someone, a fate too many women accept as given. When you grow up a poor black girl in a huge family you spend your life caring for the whole world. Children, I knew, meant that I’d be a human mop and short-order cook forever.</blockquote><h4>22. Tamara Lush, Living Inside a Virtual World <blockquote> ln 2007, Van Cleave had three different World of Warcraft accounts (each at a cost of $14.95 a month). A secret Paypal account paid for two of the accounts so his wife wouldn't hound him about the cost. He spent $224 in real money to buy fake gold, so he could get an in-game "epic-level sword" and some "top-tier armor" for his avatar. Changes in Van Cleave's personality began to appear.</blockquote> <h4>23. Dan Ariely, The Problem of Procrastination and Self-Control <blockquote> As a university professor, I'm all too familiar with procrastination. At the beginnilg of ever),semester my students make heroic promises to themselves-vowing to read their assignments on time, submit their papers on time, and in general, stay on top of things. Andevery semester I've watched as temptation takes them out on a date, over to the student union for a meeting, and off on a ski trip in the mountains-while their workload falls farther and farther behind. In the end, they wind up impressing me, not with their punctualitv, but with their creativity-inventing stories, excuses, and family tragedies to erplain their tardiness.</blockquote> <h4>24. Carlin Flora, Hello, My Name Is Unique <blockquote> Increasingly, children are also named for prized possessions. In 2000, birth certificates revealed that there were 298 Armanis, 269 Chanels, 49 Canons, 6 Timberlands, 5 Jaguars and 353 girls named Lexus in the U.S.</blockquote><h4>25. Marc Ian Barasch, Why Do We Walk On By? <blockquote> My panhandling skills are nil. Each rejection feels like a body blow. I can see the little comic-strip thought balloon spring from people's brows- Get a job! I work!</blockquote><h4>26. Stephanie Banchero and Stephanie Simon, My Teacher Is an App<blockquote> Noah and Allison Schnacky, aspiring actors who travel frequently, initially chose Florida Virtual for its flexibility. Noah says that he likes expressing his thoughts at the keyboard, alone in his room, instead of in a crowded class. But there are downsides. After fallingbehind in algebra, he tried to set up a 15-minute call with his teacher. She was booked solid-for a month.</blockquote><h4>27. Jared Diamond, Easter's End<blockquote>As ve try to imagine the decline of Easter [Island's] civilization, we ask ourselves, "Why didn't they look around, realize what they were doing, and stop before it was too late? What were they thinking when they cut down the last palm tree?"</blockquote><h2>Part 5 Reading About Issues<h2>Persuasive Writing and Opinion Pieces<h3>The Principles of Persuasive Writing<h3>The Aims of Persuasive Writing<h3>How to Read Persuasive Writing<h3>Types of Claims<h3>Kinds of Evidence<h3>The Refutation<h3>The Structure of an Argument<h3>Practice Editorial<h4>Practice Editorial: Elizabeth Royte, “A Fountain on Every Corner,” The New York Times<blockquote> An entire generation of Americans has grown up thinking public faucets equal filth, and the only water fit to drink comes in plastic, factory-sealed. It’s time to change that perception . . .</blockquote><h4>28. John Stossel, The College Scam (www.RealClearPolitics.com)<blockquote> What do Michael Dell, Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates and Mark Cuban harre in common? They're all college dropouts. Richard Branson, Simon Cowell and Peter Jennings have in common? They never went to college at all.</blockquote><h4>29. John Edgar Wideman, The Seat Not Taken, The New York Times <blockquote> I'm a man of color, one of the few on the train and often the only one in the quiet car, andI've concluded that color explains a lot about my experience. Unless the car is nearly full, color will determine, even if it doesn't exactly clarify, why 9 times out of 10 people will shun a free seat if it means sitting next to me.</blockquote><h4>30. Andy Brooks and Steve Weber, "Disarming the Hooligans Among Us," San Francisco Chronicle<blockquote> This new virtual stadium certainly can be a nasty place. It's no holds barred on someteams' Facebook pages, and you don't have to look hard to find videos of fan-on-fan violence on YouTube.</blockquote><h4>31. David Brooks, "lf It Feels Right. . ." The New York Times<blockquote> When asked to describe a moral dilemma they had faced, two-thirds of the young peopleeither couldn't answer the question or described problems that are not moral at all, like whether they could afford to rent a certain apartment or whether they had enough quarters to feed the meter at a parking spot.</blockquote><h4>32. Courtney E. Martin, Is the American Dream an lllusion? (www.AlterNet.org)<blockquote> You know the story: Once upon a time there was a hardworking, courageous young man,born in a poor family, who came to America, put in blood, sweat and tears, and eventually found riches and respect. But knowing the statistics on social mobility and the everwidening gap between rich and poor, I just can't stomach this "happily ever after" scenario. It is too clean. Real life is full of messy things like racism and the wage gap and child care and nepotism.</blockquote><h4>33. Peter Turnley, The Line-Photographs from the U.S.-Mexican Border<h2>Part 6 Reading Short Fiction <h4>34. J. Robert Lennon, Town Life<blockquote> A small town not far from here gained some small notoriety when a famous movie actress, fed up with the misanthropy and greed of Hollywood moved there with her husband, children, and many dogs and horses.</blockquote><h4>35. Yuyun Li, Souvenir<blockquote>The girl looked at the old an, unconvinced by his widower's sorrow. This was not the last time she had been approached this way, older men claiming that she reminded them of their dead wives and first loves.</blockquote><h4>36. Guy de Maupassant, The Necklace<blockquote>She was one of those pretty and charming girls who, as if through some blunder of fate, are born into a family of pen-pushers.</blockquote><h4>37. Jack London, To Build a Fire<blockquote>Fifty degrees below zero meant eighty-odd degrees of frost. Such fact impressed him asbeing cold and uncomfortable, and that was all. It did not lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature,, and upon man's frailty in general, able only to live within certain narrow limits of heat and cold; and from there on it did not lead him to the conjectural field of immortality and man's place in the universe.</blockquote><h2>Part 7 Everyday Reading<h3>Reading Newspaper and Magazine Articles (Print or online)<h4>David Brown, Test Rat a Good Samaritan, The Washington Post<h4> Lisa M. Krieger, Uncovering Glimpse of Young Universe, San Jose Mercury News<h4>"Comfort Food on the Brain." Utne<h3>Reading Warranties<h4>Warranty Information for a Sentry Fire-Safe Box-Owner's Manual<h3>Reading a Credit Card Insert<h4>Chase Sapphire Visa Credit Card-ldentity Theft Protection<h4>Reading and Comparing Package Labels-Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner vs. Annie's Macaroni & Cheese<h3>Reading Recipes<h4>Two Macaroni and Cheese Recipes<h3>Reading Blogs<h3>Interpreting Graphic Material-Pie Charts, Bar Graphs, and Line Graphs<h3>Using e- Readers-An Overview<h3>Reading Comprehension Progress Chart<h3>Index of Authors and Readings<h3>Inder of Vocabulary Preview Words<h3>Reading Comprehension Progress Chart
Rubrieken
- advisering
- algemeen management
- coaching en trainen
- communicatie en media
- economie
- financieel management
- inkoop en logistiek
- internet en social media
- it-management / ict
- juridisch
- leiderschap
- marketing
- mens en maatschappij
- non-profit
- ondernemen
- organisatiekunde
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- personeelsmanagement
- persoonlijke effectiviteit
- projectmanagement
- psychologie
- reclame en verkoop
- strategisch management
- verandermanagement
- werk en loopbaan

