Read
Read
Most of us think of reading as a simple, passive process that involves reading words in a linear
fashion and internalizing their meaning one at a time. But reading is actually a very complex
process that requires a great deal of active participation on the part of the reader.
To get a better sense of the complexity of reading, read what some experts in the field have said
about the reading process:
What do we read? The message is not something given in advance--or given at all-- but
something created by interaction between writers and readers as participants in a particular
communicative situation.
- Roy Harris in Rethinking Writing (2000)
Reading is asking questions of printed text. And reading with comprehension becomes a
matter of getting your questions answered.
- Frank Smith in Reading Without Nonsense (1997)
Literacy practices are almost always fully integrated with, interwoven into, constituted as
part of, the very texture of wider practices that involve talk, interaction, values, and beliefs.
- James Gee in Social Linguistics and Literacies (1996)
As you can see, reading involves many complex skills that have to come together in order for the
reader to be successful. For example, proficient readers recognize the purpose for reading,
approach the reading with that purpose in mind, use strategies that have proven successful to
them in the past when reading similar texts for similar purposes, monitor their comprehension of
the text in light of the purpose for reading, and if needed adjust their strategy use. Proficient
readers know when unknown words will interfere with achieving their purpose for reading, and
when they won't. When unknown words arise and their meaning is needed for comprehension,
proficient readers have a number of word attack strategies available to them that will allow them
to decipher the meaning of the words to the extent that they are needed to achieve the purpose for
reading. Reading is also a complex process in that proficient readers give to the text as much as
they take. They make meaning from the text by using their own prior knowledge and experiences.
Proficient readers are constantly making predictions while reading. They are continuously
anticipating what will come next. Their prior knowledge and experiences with texts as well as with
the world around them allow them to do this. It is this continuous interaction with the text that
allows readers to make sense of what they are reading.
NOTE:
The Phil-IRI (Philippine-Informal Reading Inventory) test is an oral test given to a
pupil to measure reading ability. Five test questions are administered constituting the
entire test.
Independent reading level – Pupil can read with ease and without the help or
guidance of a teacher. In the Phil-IRI test, they can answer four or five correct
answers (out of five test questions) and can read with rhythm, with a conversational
tone, and can interpret punctuation correctly.
Instructional reading level – Pupil can profit from instruction. In the Phil-IRI test,
they answer three out of five test questions correctly.
Frustrated reading level – Pupil gets two or below in the Phil-IRI test (out of five test
questions). They show symptoms or behavior of withdrawing from reading situations
and commit multiple types of errors in oral reading.