Teaching reading can be an arduous task as it is often difficult to know how to improve student skills. One of the most obvious, but I have found often unnoticed, points about reading is that there are different types of reading skills :
• Skimming - reading rapidly for the main
points
• Scanning - reading rapidly to find a specific
piece of information
• Extensive - reading a longer text, often for
pleasure with emphasis on overall meaning
• Intensive reading - reading a short text for
detailed information
These different types of skills are used quite
naturally when reading in a mother tongue. Unfortunately,
when learning a second or foreign language, people tend to employ only
"intensive" style reading skills.
I have often noticed that students insist on understanding every word and find
it difficult to take
my advice of reading for the general idea, or only looking for required
information. Students studying
a foreign language often feel that if they don't understand each and every word
they are somehow not completing the exercise.
In order to make students aware of these
different types of reading styles, I find it useful to provide an awareness raising lesson to help them
identify reading skills they already apply when reading in their native tongues. Thus, when approaching an
English text, students first identify what type of reading skill needs to be applied to the specific text at
hand. In this way valuable skills, which students already possess, are easily transferred to their
English reading.
Aim : Awareness raising about different reading
styles
Activity: Discussion and identification of
reading styles with follow-up identification activity
Level : Intermediate - upper intermediate
Outline:
·
Ask students about what types of reading they
do in their own mother tongue(s).
·
Write different categories of written material
on board. i.e. magazines, novels, train schedules, newspapers, advertising, etc.
·
Have students describe how they go about
reading each kind of material. You may want to prompt
them by asking the following questions:
1.
Do you read every word in the tv schedule?
2.
Do you understand every word you read when
reading a novel?
3.
What kind of clues can the presentation of the
material give?
4. How much time do you spend reading the
newspaper? Do you read every single word?
5. What kind of assumptions do you make when
you read the first few lines, or a headline?
(i.e. Once upon a time....)
6. How much time do you spend reading the
various types of materials?
·
Based on
students' answers to such questions, ask them to identify the type of skills
they are using in the various reading situations.
·
Divide
students into small groups and give them the skills summary and short
worksheet.
·
Have
students discuss their opinions about the various skills required for the
listed materials.
·
Present
various "real world" materials (i.e. magazines, books, scientific
materials, computer manuals
etc.) and ask students to identify the necessary skills required.
Source :
http://esl.about.com
kakak.. follback donk.. :D
BalasHapus