How reading shapes your brain - podcast episode cover

How reading shapes your brain

May 14, 20267 min
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Summary

Becca and Georgie discuss scientific research on how reading reshapes the brain, challenging the idea that reading is a natural ability. Experts explain that learning to read involves co-opting various brain parts, altering brain activity and structure. The episode also highlights how different writing systems, like alphabet-based languages versus Chinese characters, lead to distinct brain development and processing.

Episode description

Do you remember what it was like before you learnt to read? It's hard to think back that far! Scientific research has shown that learning to read changes the way our brains work. Not only that, but depending on the language you are reading, your brain changes in different ways. Becca and Georgie discuss this and teach you some new vocabulary.

Find a transcript and worksheet at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/6-minute-english_2026/ep-260514

Got another 6 Minutes? Try Real Easy English to learn from natural English conversations: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/real-easy-english/ Learn English from the biggest news stories from around the world: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/learning-english-from-the-news_2026

Search 'BBC Learning English' in your podcast app to find our other programmes or visit bbclearningenglish.com

Transcript

Intro / Opening

Got another six minutes? We have lots more to help you with your English. Try real easy English to learn from natural English conversations, or learn some English from the biggest news stories from around the world. Search BBC Learning English in your podcast app to find our other programs, or find much more at bbclearningenglish.com. BBC Learning English. Hello, welcome to Six Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Becca.

And I'm Georgie. Remember you can find all this episode's vocabulary along with a transcript and worksheet on our website, bbclearningenglish dot com. Now Becca, do you read a lot? Hmm, I don't read often. I just feel like I don't have the time, Georgie. How about yourself? I would love to read more, um, but I don't read very much at the moment. I read mostly before bed because I feel like it helps me relax and go to sleep. Mm.

Reading Isn't Natural

And today we're talking all about reading. We'll be hearing from some experts about how reading can change our brains. And as usual we'll be learning some useful new words and phrases. Let's start with a queers question. The longest novel in the world is widely thought to be by French author Marcel Proust, a book which, when translated into English, means remembrance of things past.

But how many words does the book contain? Is it A one hundred and thirty thousand? B one point three million or C thirteen million? Okay, the longest novel in the world. I still think thirteen million words sounds too many. So I'm gonna go with B. One point three million. All right, we'll find out at the end of the programme. Now, we might think of reading as like speaking.

We're born with the potential to do it, and then we learn. It's natural. If something is natural, it's something you were born with or that comes from nature. But Marianne Wolfe, author of the book Reader, Come Home, says that this isn't true. We think of language as natural and reading is written language, so it must be natural. But it isn't. It isn't natural at all.

Scientific studies suggest that when we're born, our brains already have the networks that allow our eyes to see and our vocal cords to produce sounds, but not with the pathways we need to read. Let's hear more from psychologist and neuroscientist Rebecca Gottlieb, speaking to the BBC World Service. From an evolutionary timescale, our brain hasn't had enough time to develop a a dedicated reading brain. And so to build a reading brain network,

We co-op parts of the brain involved in vision and auditory processing and language and attention and affect. Reading is really a whole brain process. It involves activation in all four lobes of the cortex. The process of developing a reading brain alters everything from brain activity to brain structure and brain connectivity. The power of deep reading is is really fundamental to our humanity. When we read deeply, we change our brains and we change who we are.

Rebecca says that our brains haven't evolved to include a dedicated reading brain. Dedicated here means designed and used for one particular purpose. So, because we don't have a part of the brain designed specifically for reading, when we learn to read we co opt other parts of the brain. Coopt here means to include someone or something, often against their will. Right.

Learning to read means using lots of different parts of the brain that are designed for other things, and this changes our brain structure compared to someone who hasn't learned to read.

How Language Shapes the Brain

And the language we read also shapes our brain. Chinese characters, for example, use symbols instead of letters of the alphabet to represent words and ideas. Research suggests that learning to read these symbols activates different areas of the brain to reading an alphabet based system. Scientists studied a bilingual man who could read and speak Chinese and English.

The man suffered a stroke which affected parts of his brain, including his ability to read Chinese, but amazingly he was still able to read English. Mariana Wolf explains more to the BBC World Service. It's a beautiful example of how the brain circuits reflects the requirements of Chinese, which inevitably means more visual memory and visual processing of those beautifully intricate symbols or characters.

Marianne says that the brain circuit is shaped by learning to read Chinese. A circuit is a system of connections. The visual qualities of Chinese symbols inevitably mean more visual areas of the brain are developed. inevitably means in a way that cannot be stopped or avoided. Marianne describes the symbolic Chinese characters as beautifully intricate. If something is intricate, it has lots of detail.

And something which also has lots of detail, or certainly lots of words, I asked you, Georgie, how many words are in Marcel Proust's remembrance of things past? And you were correct. Yay! The book also contains lots of very long sentences, including one with over 900 words. What? One sentence with nine hundred words, that is a lot.

Key Vocabulary and Farewell

Okay, it's time to recap the language we learned during this programme, starting with natural, which describes something you were born with or that comes from nature. Dedicated can describe something that is designed and used for one particular purpose. If you co opt someone or something, you involve them, sometimes against their will. A circuit is a system of connections, for example, in the brain. Inevitably means in a way that cannot be stopped or avoided.

And intricate describes something which has lots of detail. That's it for this episode of Six Minute English. Test what you've learned with the worksheet on our website, bbclearningenglish.com. Thanks for joining us. Goodbye. Bye.

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