Does your youngster read at a good reading level? National data paint a dismal picture. According to the National Center for Educational Statistics, 9-0 percent of eighth-graders in Washington, D.C., 81 percent in New Mexico, 80 percent in Mississippi and Nevada, 7-8 percent in Louisiana, California and Hawaii, 74 percent in Texas, and 73 percent in Florida were studying at an amount below skill in 2003. At least 63 percent of eighth-graders in 3-2 other states read at a level below effectiveness. To help parents and educators in helping kids be proficient in reading, SFK Media Specially For Kids Corp. provides an modern learning program called ReadEnt. I-t blends reading with engaging shows to teach and improve language and understanding. These Reading Movies work with a complex technology named 'Action Captions,' which show each spoken word on-screen, in real-time, like a character speaks. Based on SFK Media, this kind of captioning is beneficial in improving the rate of awareness and vocabulary devel-opment. What become ingrained within the kids' minds and, for that reason, both studying and spoken language skills develop naturally. '[Students] watching these Reading Movies, even though they think they're only watching a film that's interesting,.. To compare more, consider peeping at: [[http://naradesign.net/wiki/index.php?title=How_Will_You_Say_It_Again_In_Spanish_103622|diane lewis]] . are comprehending words. They're reading whether they understand that they're or not,' explained Chelsee Atkins, an instructor and reading specialist in Florida. 'If they sit down and watch several these films each week, they're paying 10 hours a week reading.' ReadEnt's Reading Movies can be found as fun DVD programs for use on-the TV or computer and include such classic titles as '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,' 'Tales of Gulliver's Travels' and 'The Trojan Horse.' They can be used in a variety of different teaching configurations: as a shared knowledge on one tv monitor; being a guided activity, where several students interact on their particular computers; and as-a one-to-one article, by which the teacher or parent assesses the child's knowledge and vocabulary recognition. 'Learning is playing in its most readily useful sense, and activity should be learning,' said Joy Esterberg, a language skills expert at Baruch College in Ny. 'This system is an excellent relationship between learning and entertainment.'.