Active reading helps you to:
Increase focus and concentration
Understand more of what you read
Prepare more effectively for tests and exams
Four steps:
Previewing
Marking
Reading with concentration
Reviewing
Previewing is taking a first look at your assigned reading before you really tackle the content
The purpose is to get the big picture
Strategies include mapping, outlining, listing, and creating flash cards
In mapping, draw a wheel or branching structure
Show relationships between main and secondary ideas
Outlining provides a step-by-step visual image
Make an outline of the headings and subheadings in the chapter
Effective for dealing with many new terms and definitions
Should be set up by placing terms in the left column and filling in definitions, descriptions, and examples on the right
Uses chunking
Portable test questions:
Write a question or term on the front of a small card
Add the answer or definition on the back
Use your map, outline, list, or flash cards to guide you
Read first without using your pencil or highlighter
Use methods such as underlining, highlighting, and adding margin notes or annotations
Strategies include:
Finding a quiet place to study
Muting or turning off electronic devices
Reading in blocks of time, with short breaks
Setting goals for your study period
Engaging in physical activity during breaks
Actively engaging with the material
Focusing on the important portions of the text
Understanding the words
Using organizers as you read
Reviewing is looking through your assigned reading again
Strategies include:
Considering ways to use your senses to review
Reciting aloud
Ticking off each item on a list on your fingers
Posting diagrams, maps, or outlines around your living space so that you will see them often
Evaluate the importance and difficulty of the assigned readings
Connect important ideas by asking yourself:
Why am I reading this?
Where does this fit in?
When the textbook material is the same as the lecture material, save time by concentrating on one or the other
Monitor your reading by:
Asking yourself, “Do I understand this?” (stopping and rereading if necessary)
Reciting material aloud
Asking yourself, “What are the key ideas?” and “Will I see this on the test?” after a section
Trying to guess what information will be presented next after each section
Developing your vocabulary:
Notice and write down unfamiliar terms while you preview a text
Think about the context when you come across challenging words
Consider a word’s parts
Use the glossary or a dictionary
Use new words in your writing and speaking
What to do when you fall behind on your reading:
Add one or two hours a day to your study time
Join a study group
Ask for help
Talk to your instructor
Do not give up
Read sections at the beginning of the book to learn more about the author and book structure
Preface
Foreword
Introduction
All textbooks are not created equal
Different disciplines can differ in organization and style of writing
Textbooks may not provide all the information you want to know
If the textbook seems disorganized or hard to understand, let your instructor know
In math texts, there are lots of symbols and few words
Material is presented through definitions, theorems, and sample problems
In math, you work on sample problems and exercises
After you complete an assignment, skim through other exercises in the problem set to increase your comprehension
Talk through the material to yourself
Your approach depends on whether the science text is math-based or text-based
Review the table of contents, glossary, and appendices
Pay special attention to graphs, charts, and boxes
Study learning objectives and summaries
Skim material, and then look over the end-of-chapter problems before reading the chapter
It is usually best to outline chapters
Social sciences textbooks:
Are filled with special terms specific to a particular field of study
May include differences in opinions or perspectives
Humanities textbooks:
Provide facts, examples, opinions, and original material such as stories or essays
Ask you to identify central themes or characters
Pros:
Portable and environmentally friendly
Buy books from almost anywhere
Type notes and highlight text
Print pages with a printer
Free access to many e-books
Might have multimedia features and accept audio books
Backlit screen and adjustable text size
Might have a built-in dictionary
Searchable and shareable
Cons:
Expensive
Breakable
More likely to be stolen than books
Can cause eye fatigue
Harder to flip through the pages
Limited or temporary access to some e-books
Learn more about a topic by reading primary and supplementary sources referenced in each chapter
Sources can include journal articles, research papers, and original essays
Sources often refer to concepts familiar to other scholars but not to first-year college students
Read abstracts to get the main points of a research article
Don’t give up
Read slowly and more than once
Make sure you have an English dictionary and another dictionary that links to your primary language
Take advantage of your college’s services, such as ESL tutoring and workshops