/ Read Like a PRO!
Critical Reading Strategies
Sponsored by The Center for Teaching and Learning at UIS /

What is PRO?

♠Prepare to read (pre-reading)

♠Read Actively

♠Organize to Learn

Part 1: Pre-reading Strategies

♠Concentrate

  • When is the best time during the day for you to read and study?
  • Where is the best place for you to read and study?

♠Preview

  • Title
  • What does each word in the title mean?
  • What does the phrase mean as a whole?
  • Author information
  • Who is the author ?
  • When did s/he write the piece?
  • Headings, Notes, Pictures, or Side Panels

♠Use Prior Knowledge

  • How do you relate to the piece you’ve previewed?
  • Are there any similarities between you and the author or any of the characters?
  • Have you read or heard any of the information elsewhere before?

♠Ask pre-reading questions and make predictions

  • What do you want to learn?
  • What can you predict the author will discuss?

♠Choose a reading strategy

  • What is the purpose in reading this text?
  • What is the level of difficulty?
  • How will I actively read the text?

Part 2: Reading Actively

♠Reading Actively means annotating and making connections between the material and what you already know or have experienced

♠Becoming an Active Reader

  • Devote time to fully focus on comprehending the text
  • Apply strategies that will swiftly engage you with a text and keep your concentration

♠Be aware of the environmental factors that enhance and hurt concentration

♠Be realistic about how long reading certain texts will take and set aside time for that reading

♠Plan to keep a Reading Log for every class with required reading

♠Keep a Reading Log

♠Orient yourself to the text

♠Create a Discussion Web

♠What Are You Looking For?

  • Note the subject matter and author’s purpose
  • Recognize the organization of the text, structure and genre
  • Determine the context of the text
  • Find the connections to the course
  • Decide your purpose and goal

♠Remaining Active

  • Interact with the author as you read
  • Try to figure out the author’s stance
  • Monitor your comprehension and act when your concentration flags

♠Dealing with Demanding Texts

  • Identify the major problem and resolution
  • Research the subject matter
  • Look up unknown words
  • Ask your instructor, peers, family, and friends for help

Part 3: Organizing to Learn

♠Apply Post-Reading tips

  • Decide if you achieved your goals for reading
  • Discuss the accuracy of your predictions
  • Summarize major ideas
  • Research additional information
  • Distinguish between relevant and irrelevant ideas
  • Paraphrase relevant details
  • Reflect and personalize the text

♠Create a Semantic Map

  • Helps the reader to identify important ideas
  • Shows how the ideas fit together
  • Uses comprehension/concentration skills and evolves in a note taking form
  • Represents visually the content of your reading
  • Three Components of SM
  • Core question or concept
  • Strands
  • Supports

♠Form a Discussion Group

  • Brings out new ideas you’d previously not considered
  • Takes existing ideas or concepts about the reading and expands upon them
  • Allows your interpretations to be challenged and will fill in some of your “blind spots” regarding what you just read

♠Mark Your Text

  • Read first and then mark selectively
  • Box transitions and number important ideas
  • Circle specialized vocabulary
  • Jot down main ideas in the margin
  • Write questions as you read
  • Make brief summaries at the end of each section

♠Outline what you read

  • Place major/general points to the left
  • Indent each more specific point to the right

♠Chart what you read

  • Organize categories into columns
  • Record information into the appropriate category
  • Tracks conversations and dialogues
  • Reduces amount of writing
  • Provides easy review

♠Apply Post-Reading Tips

  • Decide if you achieved your goals for reading
  • Discuss the accuracy of your predictions
  • Summarize major ideas
  • Research additional information
  • Distinguish between relevant and irrelevant ideas
  • Paraphrase relevant details
  • Reflect and personalize the text

Last Edited 6/30/2008Page 1 of 2