Efficient Reading Skills
Efficient Reading Skills
Efficient Reading Skills
Reading involves the use of the eyes and the brain. In order to read fast, you
need to use more of your brain. Reading fast means reading efficiently. This
means not wasting time and using your eyes and brain together well. To do
this, you need to read purposefully and interactively.
Purposeful
Reading is purposeful. The way you read something will depend on your
purpose. You read different texts in different ways. In everyday life, you
usually know why you are reading, you have a question and you read to find
the answer. You usually know your way around your favourite newspaper, so
if you want to know the sports results, you go straight to the correct page, or if
you want to know what is on television tonight, you go straight to the television
page. You do not start on the first page. When you read a novel, it is different.
You start at the beginning and slowly move towards the end. In academic
reading, you need to be flexible when you read - you may need to read quickly
to find relevant sections, then read carefully when you have found what you
want. General efficient reading strategies such as scanning to find the book or
chapter, skimming to get the gist and careful reading of important passages
are necessary as well as learning about how texts are structured in your
subject.
Interactive
Reading is an interactive process - it is a two-way process. As a reader you
are not passive but active. This means you have to work at constructing the
meaning from the marks on the paper, which you use as necessary. You
construct the meaning using your knowledge of the language, your subject
and the world, continually predicting and assessing. MacLachlan & Reid
(1994, pp. 3-4) talk about interpretive framing, which is essential in order to
understand what you are reading. They discuss four types of framing:
You need to be active all the time when you are reading and use all the
information that is available. It is useful, therefore, before you start reading to
try to actively remember what you know, and do not know, about the subject
and as you are reading to formulate questions based on the information you
have. All the information given above can be used to help you formulate
question to keep you interacting.
Reading comprehension is also affected by the quality of the reading material. Some writers are better
writers than others, and some writers produce more complex reading material than others. Text that is
well organized and clear is called "considerate text," and text that is poorly organized and difficult to
understand can be called "inconsiderate text." The more inconsiderate the text, the more work will be
required of a reader to comprehend the text. Readers who do not have the background, abilities, or
motivation to overcome the barriers presented in inconsiderate text will have more difficulty
comprehending these types of texts.
Students who had trouble learning to decode and recognize words often will have difficulty with reading
comprehension. Students who struggle with decoding rarely have a chance to interact with more difficult
text and often learn to dislike reading. As a result, these students do not have sufficient opportunities to
develop the language skills and strategies necessary for becoming proficient readers.
Readers with poorly developed language skills and strategies will not have the tools to take advantage of
the obvious structures and comprehension cues that are part of considerate text nor will they have the
extra tools needed to overcome the barriers of inconsiderate text.
The type of instruction that a student receives will also affect reading comprehension. Strategies for
improving reading comprehension must be taught directly by teachers. Simply providing opportunities or
requiring for children to read will not teach many students the comprehension strategies they need to be
proficient readers. These need to be taught directly as students learn to read simple sentences and this
direct instruction needs to continue in different forms throughout a student's elementary and secondary
school experience.
What strategies should I teach? The most practical way of thinking about teaching reading
comprehension is to organize instruction according to how you want students to think about strategies.
For this reason, the most straightforward way of organizing comprehension strategies is to think about
strategies that one might use before reading, during reading, and after reading.
Before Reading Strategies consist of those strategies that a student learns to use to get ready to
read a text selection. These strategies help the student get an idea of what the author might be trying to
say, how the information might be useful, and to create a mental set that might be useful for taking in and
storing information. These strategies could include previewing headings, surveying pictures, reading
introductions and summaries, creating a pre-reading outline, creating questions that might need to be
answered, making predictions that need to be confirmed, etc. The primary question for a teacher here is:
"What steps (observable as well as unobservable) should I teach students to do regularly and
automatically that will prepare them in advance to get the most out of a reading selection that needs to be
read more thoroughly?"
When a teacher introduces a reading selection to students, walks students through the text, helps the
students get ready to read through the use of advance organizers, or creates pre-reading outlines, he/she
is ensuring content learning by compensating for the fact that students have not developed good Before-
Reading Strategies. Teachers will need to continue to lead students in these types of before-reading
activities to ensure content area learning occurs until students have been taught to fluently use Before-
Reading Strategies. Teacher use of before-reading prompts and activities does not necessarily lead
students to develop and use Before-Reading Strategies independently without direct and explicit
instruction. This is why it is important to directly teach and provide practice that gradually requires
students to use Before-Reading strategies.
During Reading Strategies consist of those strategies that students learn to use while they are
reading a text selection. These strategies help the student focus on how to determine what the author is
actually trying to say and to match the information with what the student already knows. These strategies
should be influenced by the Before Reading Strategies because students should be using or keeping in
mind the previews, outlines, questions, predictions, etc. that were generated before reading and then
using this information to digest what they are reading. The During Reading Strategies that help a student
understand during reading include questioning, predicting, visualizing, paraphrasing, elaborating (i.e.,
comparing what is read to what is known), changing reading rate, rereading, etc. The primary question for
a teacher is: "What steps (observable and unobservable) should I teach students to do so that they will
regularly and automatically figure out the intended meaning of the text and how it connects to what they
already know?"
When a teacher develops reading guides and outlines that need to be completed during reading,
requires students to ask and answer questions, creates summaries as they read, etc., they are
compensating for the fact that students have not developed good During-Reading Strategies. Teachers
will need to continue to lead students in these types of during-reading activities to ensure content area
learning occurs until students are taught to fluently use Before-Reading Strategies. Teacher use of
during-reading prompts and activities does not necessarily lead students to develop and use During-
Reading Strategies independently without direct and explicit instruction. This is why it is important to
directly teach and provide practice that gradually requires students to use During-Reading strategies.
After-Reading Strategies consist of those strategies that students learn to use when they have
completed reading a text selection. These strategies are used to help the student "look back" and think
about the message of the text and determine the intended or possible meanings that might be important.
These strategies are used to follow up and confirm what was learned (e.g., answer questions or confirm
predictions) from the use of before and during reading strategies. However, After-Reading Strategies also
help the reader to focus on determining what the big, critical, or overall idea of the author's message was
and how it might be used before moving on to performance tasks or other learning tasks. The primary
question for a teacher is: "What steps (observable and unobservable) should I teach students to do so
that they will regularly and automatically stop when they are finished reading a text selection and try to
figure out the intended meaning of the text to determine what is most important and how they will use it?"
When a teacher reviews a reading selection, leads a discussion on what was important about the
author's message, helps students summarize or "look back" at what was read, provides a post-organizer,
or asks students to complete a study guide over what was learned from reading text, the teacher is
compensating for the fact that students have not developed good After-Reading Strategies. Teachers will
need to continue to lead students in these types of before reading-activities to ensure content area
learning occurs until students have been taught to fluently use After-Reading Strategies. Teacher use of
after-reading prompts and activities does not necessarily lead students to develop and use After-Reading
Strategies independently without direct and explicit instruction. This is why it is important to directly teach
and provide practice that gradually requires students to use After-Reading strategies.
What are some examples of specific strategies?Some examples of strategies are listed below. Some
of these strategies could be used in all three categories. For example, questioning could be listed in the
before, during, and after reading categories. Summarization could be listed as both during and after
reading strategies. These are grouped based on where the greatest amount of instruction needs to take
place.
Before-Reading Strategies
Before Reading Self-questioning
During-Reading Strategies
During Reading Self-questioning
Paragraph Summarization
Section Summarization
After-Reading Strategies
After Reading Self-questioning
After Reading Summarization
• Teach reading comprehension skills and strategies at all levels of reading development.
Teachers at every grade level and every subject area should always be planning how reading
assignments will help students develop and practice skills and strategies. Students need teachers
to teach and draw attention to appropriate strategy use in textbooks, especially in content areas
where there are many reading demands (e.g., language, social studies, and often science). A
reading comprehension skill is a developed ability to construct meaning effectively, immediately,
and effortlessly with little conscious attention. A reading comprehension strategy is defined as an
overt process consciously selected and used by a reader to aid the process of constructing
meaning more effectively and efficiently. Once a student uses a strategy effectively, immediately
and effortlessly with little conscious attention to construct meaning, it becomes a reading skill.
Most planning for comprehension instruction is targeted at teaching comprehension strategies
and then developing practice activities that help the student become skilled in the use of the
strategy so that it is unconsciously selected and used in a variety of situations.
First Initial: I
Last Name: Beck
Year of Publication: 1991
Article Title: Research Directions: Social Studies Texts Are Hard To
Understand: Mediating Some Of The Difficulties
Journal Name: Language Arts
Journal Volume: 68
Journal Number:
Page Numbers: 482-489
Article Purpose: The purpose of this article is to explore the characteristics of
expository texts that make them difficult for students to read by describing
some of the recent research on social studies materials.
Operation Definition: Text coherence refers to the extent to which the
sequencing of ideas in a text makes sense and the extent to which the language
used to present those ideas makes the nature of the ideas and their
relationships apparent.
Summary: Young students are used to reading narrative texts which have a
predictable structure (goal/problem, attempts to resolve that problem, and
resolution). However, when it comes to expository texts, many students have
difficulties because they are unfamiliar with the content and because
expository texts have no inherent and predictable structural elements. The
research has shown that expository texts use a mixture of elements including
cause/effect, comparison/contrast, problem/solution, and description (Meyer,
1975). Because students do not have predictable structures to rely on,
expectations about the text can only be based on knowledge of the content.
However, the purpose of expository text is to introduce new information so
the topics are likely to be unfamiliar. Therefore, there are two main influences
on comprehension, familiarity with the content and the extent to which the
content in a text is organized in a logical way. In examining fifth grade social
studies texts, the authors found that texts assumed unrealistic levels of
knowledge and often lacked coherence. The authors then experimented by
both increasing background knowledge of the material being taught and
revising the texts in order to make them more coherent. The revisions included
clarifying, elaborating, and explaining important information by making
relationships explicit. The results of this study revealed that having
background knowledge did contribute to a more successful outcome, but it did
not completely compensate for the problems of the text presentation. Greater
text coherence resulted in further comprehension enhancement. The two
recommendations that the authors suggest to help students understand
expository texts are to Go for Depth and Make Connections. They recommend
using tradebooks to set the scene for different periods in history, building
understanding of events, and considering multiple perspectives.
Conclusions: If students are to think critically about the knowledge they
acquire, they must be provided sufficient quantity and quality of information
to allow for critical consideration. The authors conclude that the students will
not get this type of understanding unless social studies curricula is based on
richer and more varied material. In the article, the authors demonstrate that
such material is readily available.
First Initial: I., M., G., & J.
Last Name: Beck, Mckeown, Sinatra, & Loxterman
Year of Publication: 1991
Article Title: Revising Social Studies Text From A Text-Processing
Perspective: Evidence Of Improved Comprehensibility
Journal Name: Reading Research Quarterly
Journal Volume: 26
Journal Number: 3
Page Numbers: 251-275
Study Purpose: The purpose of this study was to use a cognitive processing
perspective to revise a fifth grade social studies text, describe the revisions,
and demonstrate the effects of the revisions empirically.
Operation Definition:
N: 85 students (40 5th graders and 45 4th graders)
Age/Grade: 4th and 5th grade students
Ethnicity: n/a
Gender: n/a
Ability: The mean comprehension scores for fifth graders were 63.3
(SD=21.9) and for fourth graders it was 60.1 (SD=22.7) on the reading
comprehension section of the Metropolitan Achievement Test.
Achievement: n/a
Identified Exceptionality: n/a
Location: Two elementary schools in a small, middle-class public school
district in the northern United States
Content: The quality of textbooks used in schools has been a major concern
for teachers and educational researchers. It has been noted that there needs to
be in-depth descriptions of the process of text revision from the identification
of problematic aspects of original texts through the potential solutions to these
problems along with explanations for why the solutions might work.
Therefore, the authors? goals for the study were to revise a text, explain the
revisions, and demonstrate the effects on students? comprehension. When
reading texts, a reader encodes the text information and combines it with his
or her existing knowledge of the word meanings, language conventions,
knowledge about the form of the text, and general knowledge of the content. If
the reader fails to connect the text to background knowledge or the features of
the text inhibit the reader?s ability to make connections, comprehension may
be impeded. The authors made revisions to a fifth grade history text (Silver
Burdett, 1984) passages that dealt with events central to the American
Revolution by attempting to simulate the interactions between the readers (10
year old students) and the text.
Definition (if stated): None
Assessed By (tasks - tests): To assess comprehension, the authors used both
free recall and open-ended questions. The recalls and answers were
audiotaped and transcribed for later interpretation.
Treatments: In reviewing each piece of information from the original text,
the authors considered how each new piece of text information might be
handled, the kind of knowledge the reader would already need to know, and
how the developing text representation would be influenced. The students
were divided into two groups, one who read the original texts and one who
read the revised texts. The text materials were presented to students
individually. The examiner followed a written script. The student read the text
silently in four sessions, one at a time. After reading, the student was asked to
tell what the section was about in his or her own words and answer a series of
open-ended questions about the text.
Type of data collected/reported (e.g., Mean/SD, frequency, latency,
etc.): Means and standard deviations were calculated for content units recalled
by the students who read the original text and students who read the revised
text. Percentage of questions answered correctly as well as mean and standard
deviation were also calculated for both groups of students.
Dependent Measures: The dependent measures were the free recalls and
open-ended questions that the students answered.
Independent Measures: The independent measures were the written script
and the passage materials presented to the students.
Outcomes: The students who read the revised texts recalled more material
and answered more questions correctly than students who read the original
text. The effects of the revisions demonstrate that a text-processing approach
to creating comprehensible texts is practical. Furthermore, the descriptions of
the revisions expose the underlying reasons for the problems and the resulting
changes to the texts.
Follow-up Activities: None
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