160 likes | 244 Views
READING SRATEGIES: INCREASING COMPREHENSOION. Adapted by Meredith Spry, KIS Instructional Coach from the work of Dr. Mary C. Custureri. Strategy 1. BEFORE READING Look at the title Does it suggest anything to you? Think of some questions about the subject. Ask yourself:
E N D
READING SRATEGIES: INCREASING COMPREHENSOION Adapted by Meredith Spry, KIS Instructional Coach from the work of Dr. Mary C. Custureri
Strategy 1 • BEFORE READING • Look at the title Does it suggest anything to you? Think of some questions about the subject. Ask yourself: What do I know about the subject? What do I think I should learn about the subject? 2. Look at any pictures or graphs that might explain things. 3. Look at subtitles FOCUS IN
Strategy 2 • Adjust reading speed to your purpose • Skim and scan first to look for details • Re-read more slowly if to search for meaning • Give yourself time to ask questions as you read • Visualize as you read
Strategy 3 • When do you read more slowly? • To read for meaning • To think critically and respond to the author’s ideas • To take notes • To see if your questions about the passage were answered and to formulate other questions
Strategy 4: As you read • Respond to what you read • Think: What is the author trying to say? • What assumptions is he making about his subject? • What is his attitude, his voice, his tone? • Does he have good details, and does he back up what he says?
Strategy 5 • Take notes as you read • Summarize some sections • Write notes in the margins • Mark your text: Underline main points Highlight some important details serendipity Circle or mark unfamiliar words or phrases
Strategy 6 • Visualize as you read • “A picture is worth a thousand words.” • Try to picture events in your mind • This will help you understand and remember
Reading Strategy 7 • Use vocabulary strategies • Be aware of the role of prefixes, suffixes and roots • Look for word clues • (inside parentheses) • After or before a dash – • Definitions of a word after a comma Ex: ADHD, an attention deficit disorder characterized by hyperactivity , • A synonym apprehensive (fearful) • A contrasting word (Instead of being confident, she was diffident.)
Strategy 8 • If you still can’t get the meaning… • Ask someone • OR • Use a dictionary • KEEP READING…The more you read, the more your vocabulary increases…
Strategy 9 • Find Main Ideas • The main idea is like an umbrella DANCE • BALLET • TAP DANCE • COUNTRY DANCE • WALTZ • RHUMBA • TANGO
Strategy 10: Signal words • Understand transitions • Sequence • Comparison-contrast • Cause-effect • Time • Examples • Conclusions
Strategy 11: Paraphrase • UNDERSTAND TO REMEMBER • You need to make sense of something before you remember • You need to understand with your OWN words to “own” what you have learned • Memorizing just “words” does not make sense • PARAPHRASING IS IMPORTANT • Try to understand the author first • Write notes in your own words
Strategy 12: After you read • Think about your reaction to this selection • Make a list of things you learned • Think about any questions you may still have about the topic • Think about the author’s writing style. What made the author’s work effective? • Decide what is the main point of the selection.
Strategy 13: Organize ideas/notes • Organize your notes • Outline form • 1. a…… • Summary form • Mapping • Two column format question answer question answer
Strategy 14: Facts and opinion • Is what the author says valid? • Generalizations versus facts • Facts versus opinions • Enough details to back up claims • Good reasoning tactics or fallacies? • Bad generalizations, hyperbole, and words such as best, greatest, finest, never, always… • Manipulation and emotional language
Quiz yourself • Pre-reading activities (at least 3) • Vocabulary tactics (list at least 4) • At what speed should you read? • 3 note-taking strategies • Why visualize? • List at least 4 kinds of transitions. What do transitions do? • At least 4 ways to increase vocabulary • How do you know if what the author says is worthwhile?