I hardly remembered my earliest memories of reading. There are memories about the cover of the paperback book. The background is yellow-orange, the illustration is a pen painting of a young man climbing along some rocks and looking over his shoulder. I remember the story about how he ran away from trying to hurt him. A few years later, I found this book: It was kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson. When I first saw that book, I could not have three or more.
Part 1: Initial memory - What is the initial read / write memory? Which of these events will have the biggest impact on you? 2 Do you still remember reading and writing learning content? (2) Are your early reading and writing experiences positive or positive? How will these early experiences affect your cultural literacy today?
In the early days of my life, the book became rich and dominant clue in my family's fabric and my memories. Reading is also part of my school's memories I am also waiting for the teacher to remember the nun poems assigned year by year to read the next part "B" of Betsy, and rhythm It is still part of me. By reading I noticed sitting in a house or plane that you could remove the physical self and forget it and enter the place and idea that people created. Reading will enlarge me
When we recall something, we are reading from memory and saying that when we learn we are writing memories. We know that every time an electrical signal is read from the memory it is transmitted through the nerve path in the brain. This reading behavior also makes your path in your brain more intense - it makes it easier to identify this memory in the future. We say that all reading is writing if it becomes a human memory. You can use this when you learn a new word. By reading the words you learned from memory, you also write them back into memory and make the nerve path of that word stronger. One of my professors suggested that you take a few minutes a day to review what you have learned for this reason.