• From a Teacher’s Heart💔: How Do We Make Students Read Again?

    As a teacher, I’ve watched something shift over the past few years. Once, I could hand a book to a student and see their imagination light up. Now? Many hesitate. Some roll their eyes. Others say, “I don’t read.”📚

    It’s not that they can’t read. It’s that they no longer see reading as something meaningful for them.
    And that breaks my heart a little.💔
    Any solutions????

  • @Nawres-Alabed You're not alone it’s a growing challenge. Try connecting books to their world: graphic novels, audiobooks, TikTok-famous titles, or stories that reflect their lives. Let them choose and own their reading. Curiosity comes alive when they feel seen. 💡📖

  • @Nawres-Alabed
    Dear, It happens everywhere and almost with every student, even adults. As a motivator, we can motivate our students by applying methods like storytelling, group discussions, presentations, assignments, and quiz competitions, which can build curiosity among students towards reading.

    Sobia

  • @Nawres-Alabed
    Dear it happens everywhere and almost with every students even with adults. Being a motivator we can motivate our students by applying following methods like storytelling, group discussions, presentations, assignments, quiz competitions etc can build curiosity among students towards reading.

    Sobia

  • @Nawres-Alabed Set up book clubs, reading groups, literature circles. Many students (especially boys) need to interact with each other around texts. It greatly enhances their comprehension and makes it so much more enjoyable.

  • @Sanam Assess Student Ability First. ...
    Choral Reading/Partner Reading. ...
    Use Visual Aids. ...
    Assign Reading Buddies Across Ages & Grades. ...
    Implement Audiobooks. ...
    Teach Academic English.

  • @SOBIARANAM-IRFAN we can motivate our students by applying methods like storytelling, group discussions, presentations, assignments, and quiz competitions, which can build curiosity among students towards reading.

  • @Nawres-Alabed
    Yes, it’s heartbreaking but not hopeless. Start with student interests offer choice, use graphic novels, or audiobooks. Make reading social with book circles, read-alouds, and creative discussions. Model your own love for reading. When students see reading as relevant, joyful, and empowering, the spark can return.