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Effective Reading Strategies. Academic Advising Office. Content. Why Reading is important? Q&A with students Why to Read? Difference between reading for school and for university assignments Reading Strategies: Previewing Annotating Outline, summarize, analyze Contextualize
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Effective Reading Strategies Academic Advising Office
Content • Why Reading is important? • Q&A with students • Why to Read? • Difference between reading for school and for university assignments • Reading Strategies: • Previewing • Annotating • Outline, summarize, analyze • Contextualize • Reading in a Foreign Language
Most importantly good reading skills lead to academic success
School vs University • University readings are more sophisticated • Students required not only read the text, but rather critically engage with it • The amount of reading is much greater than in school
How to read effectively? • Critical reading-active engagement with texts – is essential to your academic success at AUCA and to your intellectual growth • Reading strategies: • Previewing • Annotating • Outline, summarize, analyze • Contextualize
Previewing Previewing enables you to develop a set of expectation about the scope and aim of the text. • Determine how long the assigned reading is • Thus how much time and energy you are going to spend on it • What do headings, abstract, or other introductory material tell you?
Previewing • Is the author already known to you? • How does the disposition or layout of a text prepare you for reading? • Is the material broken into parts/subtopics, sections, or the like? • Are there long and unbroken blocks of text or smaller paragraphs or “chunks” and what does this suggest? How does this help you understand the argument of the text?
Annotating Annotating puts you actively and immediately in a “dialogue” with an author and the issue and ideas you encounter in a written text. It is also a way to have an ongoing conversation with yourself as you move through the text and to record what that encounter was like for you.
1. Throw away your highlighter • Throw away your highlighter: it gives the illusion of active reading • Distracts you from business and comprehension (if only highlighting) • Those bright lines you put on a page one day can seem strangely cryptic the next.
2. Mark up the margins of your text with words and phrases: • What to write • Ideas that occur to you • Notes about things that seem important to you • The relation to class discussion • Questions • Advantages • This will keep you conscious of the reason of the reading • Useful during reviews for exams
3. Symbol system 4.Ask questions 3. Symbol system • Develop your own symbol system: • * for key idea or ! for surprising, absurd, bizarre • create your personalized symbols for indicating • Example: you could have a mark for identifying thequoteto you in your paper • Useful for searching through the text quickly and for preparation for exams 4. Ask questions • Get in the habit of hearing yourself ask questions: • “What does it mean?” • “Why author draws this conclusion?” • Things you do not understand • Issues you would like to ask the teachers (write on the margins)
Outline, Summarize, Analyze • Take the information apart, look at its parts, and then try to put it back together again in language that is meaningful to you. • The best way to determine that you’ve really gotten the point is to be able to state it in your own words.
Outline • Outlining enables you to see the skeleton of an argument: the thesis, the first point and evidence (and so on), through the conclusion. • You can outline informally just on the margins on the margins of your readings
Summarize, Analyze • Summarize: • In a sentence or a paragraph write up the connections between ideas • Analyzing • Adds an evaluative component to the summarizing process – it requires you not just to restate main ideas, but also test the logic, credibility, and emotional impact of an argument. You need to reflect on the argument. Questions to consider: • What is the writer asserting? • What I am being asked to believe or accept? Facts? Opinions? Some mixture? • What reasons or evidence does the author supply to convince me? Where is the strongest or most effective evidence – why is it compelling?
Contextualize • Take a moment and put it in perspective. • When you contextualize, you essentially “re-view” a text you’ve encountered, framed by its historical, cultural, material, or intellectual circumstances • When was it written or where was it published? Do these factors change or otherwise influence how you view a piece? • Also view the reading through the lens of your own experience.
Reading in a Foreign Language • Do not read to learn words, but to explore ideas. • Don’t try to understand every word. Try to understand overall meaning • Don’t translate every word – only use dictionary if a word keeps appearing in a text and you still don’t understand it • Physical books (you can write and highlight) • Make notes and underline new words and expressions • Don’t just read a book and then forget about it; try to analyze it
Exercise • Distribute the readings • Go through each of the Reading Techniques
Sources • Esl.fis.edu/learners/advice/read.htm • Esl.fis.edu/parents/advice/read.htm • Susan Gilroy, Librarian for Undergraduate Programs for Writing, Lamont and Widener Libraries. President and Fellows of Harvard College • Inspirationboost.com/8-reasons-why-reading-is-so-important • www.learnenglish.de/improveEnglish/improvereadingpage.html