280 likes | 563 Views
2. Key words for this presentation:. Reading for different purposesSkim readingScan readingReading for detailActive readingAcademic journalsAbstracts. 3. Strategic approaches. Academic reading should be systematic and strategicYou may need to practice and define a reading skills setYou need
E N D
1. 1 Effective academic readingSO601 Shaun Theobald
The Student Learning Advisory Service
7th October 2009
2. 2 Key words for this presentation: Reading for different purposes
Skim reading
Scan reading
Reading for detail
Active reading
Academic journals
Abstracts
3. 3 Strategic approaches Academic reading should be systematic and strategic
You may need to practice and define a reading skills set
You need to adopt techniques that increase the efficiency and productivity of reading sessions
Firstly, remember you cannot read everything on the reading list!
Good reading techniques start with a systematic selection of reading material
4. 4 Selecting texts Use your reading lists
Talk to other people
Staff/seminar leaders
Peers
Always cover texts identified as core reading
Tackle these first
5. 5 Selecting texts The priority/ratio of reading should be-
50-40% core texts
25-30% important material
25-30% relevant but specialised material
You must always be able to answer two fundamental questions:
Why am I reading this?
What do I hope to gain from it?
6. 6 Varying reading practice Effective academic reading involves reading for different purposes
You cannot read everything with equal intensity and detail!
At times its perfectly acceptable to read lightly for general meaning
Constructive superficiality
At other times you must read very carefully with full attention to every detail
In reading for different purposes, you need to be able to skim, scan and read for detail
7. 7 Varying reading practice You may read the same text in different ways at different times
Example:
Journal article read very quickly + a few very brief notes to prepare for seminar
Perhaps in conjunction with 3-4> other articles
The same journal article read again to embed in a subsequent assignment
Now read with full attention to detail
8. 8 Survey your material Before you start reading a text, spend a few minutes on a general survey
Book-based resources
Covers
Bibliographical information
Introduction/ foreward
Contents
Index
9. 9 Survey your material
Chapter headings
Selective skim reading of chapter introductions/conclusions
Article in a journal
Editorial/thematic information
Abstract (s)
Reference list (s)
Selective skim reading of other articles - introductions/conclusions
The reading survey gives valuable contextual information
10. 10 Raise questions in advance Before you start reading a text, spend a few minutes raising questions in advance
What are you hoping to gain from this text? What are the research issues/hypotheses you are exploring?
Jot these down on a post-it or index card
Keep these points by you as you read
In conjunction with other active reading techniques, this will keep you in focus
11. 11 Skim reading: Reading Stage 1 Work with a suitable amount of text
If you are reading several chapters/ sections from a book, take one at a time
A 5-15 pp journal article is fine
Two/three minutes; read the first and last sentence of each paragraph
Ten/fifteen minutes; read the whole text sequentially
Keep your eye-movements moving forwards across the text
12. 12 Skim reading If you find a passage you dont understand, keep going!
This will seem counter-intuitive but disobey your instincts!!
Mark lightly, in pencil
Particularly difficult passages
Any sections that match the questions you raised in advance (Slide 10)
A few passages that particularly interest you
No more than 20% of the total for all of the above!
At this stage, you need an overall impression/understanding
a sketch map of the reading territory
This gives context and meaning to more careful reading
13. 13 Scan reading: Reading Stage 2 Go back over the c <20% of the text you have marked up
Read carefully, trying to absorb as much as possible
At this stage, you are aiming to enhance your understanding of the whole text
Do you need to read more? Stage 1 and 2 reading may give a reasonable general understanding. If you do need to read more carefully, e.g. reading for an assignment, go to Stage 3
14. 14 Read for detail: Reading Stage 3 Here you are reading to memorise and retain information
[By the time you get to this stage, skim and scan reading will help you! You will now proceed rapidly because you have context and background for your text]
This means taking some form of notes, where the process of conversion to your own words means you obtain a kind of ownership of the material concerned
Please note that good notes are not:
Summaries of the whole
Chunks of the original copied down
15. 15 Read for detail However, good notes are:
Selective details (matched to your purpose!)
See initial questions Slide 10
Paraphrases and summaries in your own words
Short, neat and containing
Relevant bibliographical details
Good notes will follow academic paragraph structure
See Slide 18 below
You can use this sense of structure to guide your reading and note-taking
16. 16 Note taking techniques Explore techniques for note taking:
Abbreviations
Contractions
Use of layout
Headings/sub-headings
Bullet points
Colour
Font size
17. 17 Practice active reading All the techniques above +
Read ahead
Practice second-guessing
Make global micro-summaries every 2-3 pages
Learn specialist terms in advance
Use a template for your notes
Continually raise questions
18. 18 The structure of an academic paragraph
Academic paragraphs tend to have
Topic sentence
Explanation/analysis
Evidence
Transitional statements
Main ideas = topic sentences
This means the paragraph is unified around one central idea
Use this structure to break down information within the paragraph
19. 19 ACTIVITY: Paragraph structure Marked passage from
Greener, I & Powell, M (2008) The Evolution of Choice Policies in UK Housing, Education and Health Policy. Journal of Social Policy, 38, (1) 63-81 [printed version] p67
Parallel passage identify topic sentence; explanation/analysis; evidence; transitional statements
20. 20 Academic journals Crucial source of information
Often WWW
Rapid way of disseminating information within an academic community
Especially relevant to Social Policy
Contain latest ideas
Often searchable through indexes and abstracts
See Templeman Library www
21. 21 Academic journals Hierarchy of academic ideas/information:
Book- infrequent - collected over several years, often draws on
Conference papers/proceedings quite frequent - usually annual and often related to..
Short individual journal articles frequent - often quarterly
[WWW sources very frequent, often uk.gov.org, tend to present data/findings rather than discussion]
22. 22 Academic journals Good research and good reading has an organic proportion of these sources!
e.g. 10 Sources for 2500 wd essay
2 Main books
3 Support texts (multiple-authored texts; conference proceedings etc)
3/4 Journal articles (may be WWW versions.)
1/2 WWW sources
So journals should be about 30/40% of the reading load!
23. 23 Working with journals Remember the power of the abstract
Many journal articles both hard copy and www have an abstract at the start
This represents a concise synopsis of the whole text
It is a condensed version of the whole argument the paper presents
It allows the reader to anticipate and contextualise the paper before s/he reads it
24. 24 Working with journals ALWAYS read the abstract first
Use the abstract
as a guide through the paper
to decide whether you need to read the whole of a paper
to compare papers
Tip: if you are working with a photocopy of an article, use different coloured highlighter to identify separate stages in the abstract
Mark the parallel sections of the paper with highlighter to show how they correspond
25. 25 Further advice and guidance www.kent.ac.uk/uelt/learning/slas
For resources, information, advice and guidance