Teaching Reading
Strategies for Developing Reading Skills
Using
Reading Strategies

Effective language instructors show students how they
can adjust their reading behavior to deal with a variety of situations, types
of input, and reading purposes. They help students develop a set of reading
strategies and match appropriate strategies to each reading situation.
Strategies that can help students read more quickly and
effectively include
- 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 about content
and vocabulary and check comprehension; using knowledge of the text type
and purpose to make predictions about discourse structure; using knowledge
about the author to make predictions about writing style, vocabulary, and
content
- Skimming
and scanning: using a quick survey of the text to get the main idea,
identify text structure, confirm or question predictions
- Guessing
from context: using prior knowledge of the subject and the ideas in the
text as clues to the meanings of unknown words, instead of stopping to
look them up
- Paraphrasing:
stopping at the end of a section to check comprehension by restating the
information and ideas in the text
Instructors can help students learn when and how to
use reading strategies in several ways.
- By modeling
the strategies aloud, talking through the processes of previewing,
predicting, skimming and scanning, and paraphrasing. This shows students
how the strategies work and how much they can know about a text before
they begin to read word by word.
- By allowing
time in class for group and individual previewing and predicting
activities as preparation for in-class or out-of-class reading. Allocating
class time to these activities indicates their importance and value.
- By using
cloze (fill in the blank) exercises to review vocabulary items. This helps
students learn to guess meaning from context.
- By
encouraging students to talk about what strategies they think will help
them approach a reading assignment, and then talking after reading about
what strategies they actually used. This helps students develop
flexibility in their choice of strategies.
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