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9.3: Supporting College Level Reading

  • Page ID
    367229
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    Active Reading Strategies

    Note to Instructor: This set of suggestions can be given to students before their first assignment that includes academic reading. One way to teach it is to have students read it aloud together and to comment on which suggestions they find helpful and to share some of their own reading strategies.

    1. Pick an environment and time to read that can help you focus.

    2. Read it out loud or have it read by the Immersive Reader at the top right on Canvas. Explore what works best for you: Printed, online, audio etc.

    3. Work with a partner or group to split the reading and collaborate

    4. Ask yourself pre-reading questions. For example: What is the topic, and what do you already know about it? Why has the instructor assigned this reading at this point in the class?

    5. Identify and define any unfamiliar terms.

    6. Skim first, by reading the first and last paragraphs and a few paragraphs at the start or end of sections to get a big picture overview of the reading.

    7. Bracket the main idea or thesis of the reading and put an asterisk next to it. Pay particular attention to the introduction or opening paragraphs to locate this information.

    8. As you read, in the margins or in a notebook with pages marked, respond as you read.  You can summarize the text, ask questions, give assent, or protest vehemently. You can also write down keywords to help you recall where important points are discussed. Above all, strive to enter into a dialogue with the author.

    9. Read each paragraph carefully and then determine “what it says” and “what it does.” Answer “what it says” in only one sentence. Represent the main idea of the paragraph in your own words. To answer, “what it does,” describe the paragraph’s purpose within the text, such as “provides evidence for the author’s first main reason” or “introduces an opposing view.”

    10. Write a summary of an essay or chapter in your own words. Do this in less than a page. Capture the essential ideas and perhaps one or two key examples. This approach is a great way to ensure you know what the reading really says or is about.

    11. Talk about it. Teach what you have learned to someone else! Research clearly shows that teaching is one of the most effective ways to learn. If you try to explain aloud what you have been studying, (1) you’ll transfer the information from short-term to long-term memory, and (2) you’ll quickly discover what you understand — and what you don’t.

    12. Link what you read to existing knowledge from information in the course, a previous course or your personal experience.

    13. Look for relationships and patterns in the reading.

    14. Use imagery and visualizations to help them remember information.

    15. Act as an interpreter of the text by putting things into your own words.

    16. Reflect on why the information is significant and how it relates to other concepts or to yourself

     

    Active Reading Strategies by Angélica Esquivel and Cynthia Kaufman, is licensed CC BY 4.0 and is an ancillary for Introduction to Community Organizing, which is licensed CC BY 4.0

     


    9.3: Supporting College Level Reading is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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