The document discusses several reading strategies: scanning involves quickly searching text to find specific information; skimming allows readers to get the main points without reading details; previewing helps readers learn about a text before reading closely by reviewing introductory material and identifying the topic and purpose. Previewing involves examining titles, subtitles and visuals to make predictions about the content. Summarizing requires determining the important ideas and restating them in your own words, while using context clues can help define unfamiliar words.
The document discusses several reading strategies: scanning involves quickly searching text to find specific information; skimming allows readers to get the main points without reading details; previewing helps readers learn about a text before reading closely by reviewing introductory material and identifying the topic and purpose. Previewing involves examining titles, subtitles and visuals to make predictions about the content. Summarizing requires determining the important ideas and restating them in your own words, while using context clues can help define unfamiliar words.
The document discusses several reading strategies: scanning involves quickly searching text to find specific information; skimming allows readers to get the main points without reading details; previewing helps readers learn about a text before reading closely by reviewing introductory material and identifying the topic and purpose. Previewing involves examining titles, subtitles and visuals to make predictions about the content. Summarizing requires determining the important ideas and restating them in your own words, while using context clues can help define unfamiliar words.
The document discusses several reading strategies: scanning involves quickly searching text to find specific information; skimming allows readers to get the main points without reading details; previewing helps readers learn about a text before reading closely by reviewing introductory material and identifying the topic and purpose. Previewing involves examining titles, subtitles and visuals to make predictions about the content. Summarizing requires determining the important ideas and restating them in your own words, while using context clues can help define unfamiliar words.
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Scanning: for a specific focus
The technique you use when you're looking up a
name in the phone book: you move your eye
quickly over the page to find particular words or phrases that are relevant to the task you're doing. You jump directly to the information. You search a text very quickly to find information
you want. Skimming: for getting the gist of something The technique you use when you're going
through text you read quickly to get the main
points, and skip over the detail. Previewing: Learning about a text before really reading it. Previewing enables readers to get a sense of
what the text is about and how it is organized
before reading it closely. This simple strategy includes seeing what you can learn from the head notes or other introductory material, skimming to get an overview of the content and organization, and identifying the rhetorical situation. One way to enter a text is to preview titles, subtitles, visuals, and other text features and make a prediction about the topic and purpose of the text. The "Previewing and Predicting" strategy will lead you through a series of questions that will help them make an accurate prediction. These predictions help to think about what they already know about the topic. The ability to access prior knowledge helps to develop a critical schema (or cognitive map) that they can use to increase their comprehension. Previewing: reviewing titles, section headings, and photo captions to get a sense of the structure and content of a reading selection Predicting: using knowledge of the subject
matter to make predictions
Skimming and scanning: using a quick survey
of the text to get the main idea, identify text
structure, confirm or question predictions Summarizing requires you to determine what is important in what you are reading and to put it into your own words. Instruction : Identify or generate main ideas Connect the main or central ideas Eliminate unnecessary information Remember what you read Using the context of surrounding words and sentences, you will be able to figure out the meaning of new and unfamiliar words. Practice looking for new and unfamiliar
words in prepared sentences and use context
to determine meanings of words. Readers understand the most important idea about what is being read. This idea is often stated in a sentence in the passage, whereas other sentences comprise pieces of information that tell more about the most important idea.