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Basic reading skills

Basic reading skills. What is reading?. Reading is the process of getting back and understanding some form of stored information or ideas. What do we read?. Reading by humans is mostly done from paper with ink, e.g. a book, magazine, newspaper, leaflet, notebook. (PRINT)

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Basic reading skills

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  1. Basic reading skills

  2. What is reading? • Reading is the process of getting back and understanding some form of stored information or ideas.

  3. What do we read? • Reading by humans is mostly done from paper with ink, e.g. a book, magazine, newspaper, leaflet, notebook. (PRINT) • Now you can do reading via the 'World Wide Web' (NON PRINT).

  4. How do we read? • We read at different speeds for different purposes of reading….

  5. Detailed reading: • Reading for memorization (under 100 words per minute) • Reading for learning (100–200 wpm) to slow down when the concepts are closer together or when the content is unfamiliar

  6. Detailed reading: • Reading for comprehension (200–400 wpm) –Important ! the essence of most people’s daily reading

  7. Skimming: for getting the gist of something • Skimming (400–700 wpm) Use skimming when you're trying to decide if a book in the library or bookshop is right for you. When you're going through a newspaper or magazine in the morning: you read quickly to get the main points, and skip over the detail. Then you rush to your school.

  8. Scanning: for a specific focus Scanning (more than 700 wpm) • When you're looking up a name in the phone book; • When you’re looking up your name in a lucky draw result list in the newspaper.

  9. Active reading: elaboration and rereading. • When you're reading for your course, you need to make sure you're actively involved with the text.

  10. How will you read in these situations? • The TV guide for Friday evening • An English grammar book • An article in National Geographic magazine about the Roman Empire • A good friend's homepage on the Internet • The opinion page in your local newspaper • The weather report in your local newspaper • A novel

  11. A poem • A bus timetable • A fax at the office • An advertising email - so called "spam" • An email or letter from your best friend • A recipe • A short story by your favourite author

  12. The usual plot of a story • Beginning>>> • Development>>> • Crisis/ problems>>> • Solution

  13. In this term • We will read 4 class readers and you will learn how to read stories. Then you will choose your books to read in library lessons. • Later you will re-tell the stories to others.

  14. http://www.bookhaven.co.uk/ • http://www.studyskills.soton.ac.uk/studytips/reading_skills.htm • http://www.kidzone.com/ecc/ssmart13.htm • http://www.readingcomprehensionconnection.com/reading_lesson.php

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