Pre reading exercises are used, usually by teachers, to teach young children how to read. These may include learning the letters of the alphabet, or picture/word association.
Prereading, Reading, and Review.
Prereading activities can provide context, activate prior knowledge, and enhance comprehension. Engaging in activities such as skimming, predicting, and brainstorming before reading can help students make connections and prepare them to better understand the material.
Eileen Haller has written: 'A study of the effect of prereading instruction on reading comprehension'
The six active reading strategies are previewing, questioning, summarizing, predicting, connecting, and evaluating. These strategies help readers engage with the text, understand the content, and retain information more effectively.
In the pre-reading phase you will try to get a better understanding to what you are reading by analyzing the title , picture (if any) and also seeing if anything looks familiar.
Before reading a text, you can use the 5 W's (who, what, when, where, why) to gather background information. Identify the author (who), the main topic (what), the time period (when), the setting (where), and the purpose of the text (why) to help orient yourself and set the context for understanding the material.
Active exercise, Aerobic exercise,endurance exercise, isokinetic exercise, isometric exercise, kegal exercise, passive exercise, resistance exercise..
An alternative exercise to the pull through exercise is the glute bridge exercise.
__________ is a principle of exercise stating to improve at an exercise or skill, a person should perform that exercise or skill.
The opposite of isometric exercise is isotonic exercise.
Free exercise is exercise that you can do without paying a fee. You can find free exercise videos on the Internet.
Aerobic exercise is cardio exercise (where you get your heart rate up). Resistance exercise is weight training using resistance.