Reading Strategies - How to!
Good reading strategies help you to read in a very efficient way. Using
them, you aim to get the maximum benefit from your reading with the minimum
effort. This section will show you how to use 6 different strategies to
read intelligently.
Strategy
1: Knowing what you want to know
The first thing to ask yourself
is: Why you are reading the text? Are you reading with a purpose or just
for pleasure? What do you want to know after reading it?
Once you know this, you can examine the text to see whether it is going
to move you towards this goal. An easy way of doing this is to look at
the introduction and the chapter headings. The introduction should let
you know whom the book is targeted at, and what it seeks to achieve. Chapter
headings will give you an overall view of the structure of the subject.
Ask yourself whether the book meets your needs. Ask yourself if it assumes
too much or too little knowledge. If the book isn't ideal, would it be
better to find a better one?
Strategy
2: Knowing how deeply to study the material
Where you only need the shallowest
knowledge of the subject, you can skim material. Here you read only chapter
headings, introductions and summaries.
If you need a moderate level of information on a subject, then you can
scan the text. Here you read the chapter introductions and summaries in
detail. You may then speed read the contents of the chapters, picking
out and understanding key words and concepts. At this level of looking
at the document it is worth paying attention to diagrams and graphs.
Only when you need detailed knowledge of a subject is it worth studying
the text. Here it is best to skim the material first to get an overview
of the subject. This gives you an understanding of its structure, into
which you can fit the detail gained from a full reading of the material.
SQ3R is a good technique for getting a deep understanding of a text.
Strategy
3: Active Reading
When you are reading a document
in detail, it often helps if you highlight, underline and annotate it
as you go on. This emphasizes information in your mind, and helps you
to review important points later.
Doing this also helps to keep your mind focused on the material and stops
it wandering.
This is obviously only something to do if you own the document! If you
find that active reading helps, then it may be worth photocopying information
in more expensive texts. You can then read and mark the photocopies.
If you are worried about destroying the material, ask yourself how much
your investment of time is worth. If the benefit you get by active reading
reasonably exceeds the value of the book, then the book is disposable.
Strategy 4: How to study different
sorts of material
Different sorts of documents hold information in different places
and in different ways. They have different depths and breadths of coverage.
By understanding the layout of the material you are reading, you can extract
useful information much more efficiently.
Reading
Magazines and Newspapers:
These tend to give a very fragmented coverage of an area. They will typically
only concentrate on the most interesting and glamorous parts of a topic
- this helps them to sell copies! They will often ignore less interesting
information that may be essential to a full understanding of a subject.
Typically areas of useful information are padded out with large amounts
of irrelevant waffle or with advertising.
The most effective way of getting information from magazines is to scan
the contents tables or indexes and turn directly to interesting articles.
If you find an article useful, then cut it out and file it in a folder
specifically covering that sort of information. In this way you will build
up sets of related articles that may begin to explain the subject.
Newspapers tend to be arranged in sections. If you read a paper often,
you can learn quickly which sections are useful and which ones you can
skip altogether.
Reading
Individual Articles:
Articles within newspapers and magazines tend to be in three main types:
·
News Articles:
Here the most important information is presented first, with information
being less and less useful as the article progresses. News articles are
designed to explain the key points first, and then flesh them out with
detail.
·
Opinion Articles:
Opinion articles present a point of view. Here the most important information
is contained in the introduction and the summary, with the middle of the
article containing supporting arguments.
·
Feature Articles:
These are written to provide entertainment or background on a subject.
Typically the most important information is in the body of the text.
If you know what you want from an article, and recognize its type, you
can extract information from it quickly and efficiently.
Strategy
6: Using glossaries with technical documents
If you are reading large amounts
of difficult technical material, it may be useful to photocopy or compile
a glossary. Keep this beside you as you read. It will probably also be
useful to note down the key concepts in your own words, and refer to them
when necessary.
Usually it is best to make notes as you go. The most effective way of
doing this may be to
use concept maps.
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