Read & Remember Articles
SKILL: Reading (also Memory)
DIFFICULTY: 5/5
LEVELS: 4 based on the length and complexity of the text and the question types
BRIEF RATIONALE: This treatment teaches strategies for understanding and recalling paragraph-level material.
In Read & Remember Articles, you will:
- Read aloud
- Identify key words and phrases
- Compare your selection with a model
- Summarize the article using the selected words and phrases
- Answer 4 open-ended questions about what you’ve read
You can choose reading material from the following categories:
- Health & Science
- Leisure & Entertainment
- History & Culture
HINTS: Hints are available in the lower-left corner of the screen for questions. Using the hints will mark the questions as incorrect (since they were not answered independently).
- Find: See the section of the text that contains the answer.
- Multiple Choice: Choose the right answer from three choices.

FOR THE CLINICIAN:
Adults with a brain injury may have trouble remembering details they've read, even if they can recall the gist of information (Rogalski et al., 2014). If they can't recall any details, they would have great difficulty answering comprehension questions about the text.
In a systematic review, Purdy and colleagues (2018) outlined simple strategies to facilitate attentive reading, recall, and comprehension of longer text for people with aphasia, including:
- Oral reading
- Using an index card to focus on the current line of text
- Reading 2-3 sentences at a time
- Identifying keywords
- Summarizing
More specifically, Obermeyer & Edmonds (2018) had subjects compare their keywords with the clinicians' keywords within the Attentive Reading and Constrained Summarization–Written (ARCS-W) approach. Subjects used these keywords to assist with summarization, just like in the Read & Remember Articles treatment. Approaches such as ARCS and ARCS-W help improve reading comprehension by synthesizing essential information (van Boxtel & Weirick, 2025).
Learn more about treating reading impairments in our article, What SLPs Need To Know: Alexia
Selected References:
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van Boxtel, W. S., & Weirick, J. D. (2025). Reading comprehension in aphasia: A review of research and treatment. Language and Linguistics Compass, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/lnc3.70031