Begin with the Abstract and then skim through the Introduction, Sections, and Tables (if included). These sections usually provide important background information and explain what happened in the study.
Level 1 Can Read
For preschoolers and kindergarteners who know the alphabet, can recognize rhyming words, and are eager to begin reading. Big type can read and simple words make these books easy for children to read, with picture clues and rhyme for added fun.
For emerging readers who are gaining confidence but still need help with letter names and sounds, rhyming awareness, and syllable counting. This level offers longer sentences and language play with familiar characters like the Berenstain Bears, Pinkalicious, and Veggie Tales.
Children who reach this level can read a variety of short digital or print texts, such as school timetables and bus or train schedules. They can also find information in their pay slips, medical or dental records, or textbooks. These are the same skills adults need to locate a single piece of specific information when searching for something on the internet or in their email.
Level 2 Can Read
Level 2 books feature more complex story lines and sentence structures, introducing children to a wider variety of vocabulary. Children love these engaging stories, and parents can use them to teach reading comprehension skills like characterization, problem and solution, point of view, making connections, and inferring.
Level 1 introduces children to the world of books through reading quality picture books out loud and relaxed discussions. This is the first can read step in building reading fluency and confidence. Children will learn to identify the main idea of a story, ask questions, make predictions, and understand that pictures provide clues about what is happening in the story.
For traders, Level 2 reveals a stock’s supply and demand in real time. This information gives insight into the market, including how many buyers and sellers are out there with open orders. It also helps you identify potential support and resistance levels. This data should be used in conjunction with other trade tools, like technical charts, to make better trading decisions.
To access Level 2 data, you must have a can read brokerage account that supports it. Most trading platforms include it as part of their suite of tools, and some futures brokers, such as Ironbeam, offer it as a separate subscription. You can also purchase a subscription through independent software providers.
The data includes the four-letter code that corresponds to a particular market maker, which is often an institutional trading desk. This information can help you identify patterns in how a stock is traded, especially for low-liquidity stocks. You can also look at the volume of outstanding buy and sell orders to see if there are a lot of shares on either side of the bid/ask spread.
In addition to providing order depth can read information, Level 2 provides a wealth of other market intelligence, such as the total size of outstanding orders and the average trade size. This information can be useful to traders, but it is important to remember that it can be misleading. For example, some market makers will hide the size of their orders, or even spoof prices that they don’t intend to execute.
Level 3 Can Read
Level 3 books are ideal for the transitional reader who can read multisyllable words, recognize prefixes and suffixes, and identify story elements. Engaging stories and longer sentences with complex themes and high-interest subjects, like animals, adventure, and friendship, are included. Frog and Toad titles, Berenstain Bears, and Pinkalicious are favorites at this level.
Weekly nature-inspired reading and can read writing activities introduce key comprehension skills through quality picture books, relaxed discussions, and engaging activities. Topics include characterization, problem and solution, making connections, summarizing, and inferring. Students will build background knowledge, language skills, and independence.
Level 4 Can Read
When you read at level 4, you’re reading syntopically. This means that you are finding out more about what you read than just the facts, and you are also comparing information to other things that you know, finding differences, can read determining how a topic fits in with other topics (or people), and thinking about how your ideas relate to other ideas. This is how you learn and memorize important information – but you can’t do it without a good base in decoding, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, and phonics.
The Bottom Lines
Level 4 in All About Reading is for can read students who already have a solid foundation in these areas, but want to continue to build their skills. Like previous levels, this program includes phonogram and word cards, fluency sheets, cut-out games, word-flippers, and two reading books with high-interest can read stories. AAR Level 4 also includes an easy-to-use teacher’s manual and student activity book.