Tag Archives: reading

LISTEN AND READ. LITERATURE, WHY NOT?

LibriVox is a great site where you can download audiobooks and their text form, so you can read and listen, which is great!

They’ve got a good catalog with varied genres and authors to choose from.

Librivox

Skimming and Scanning. Reading Comprehension Exercises

Learning to read in the two above ways is important!

The more times we read a text, the more we tend to understand. However, sometimes we might be short of time (e.g. tests and exams) and being an efficient reader is important here.

 I’d like you to consider some hints and tips that will help you succeed when you face reading comprehension exercises to be done in a limited amount of time.

Time yourself in every step and keep a record of your marks, you’ll see the progress you’re making.

 Skimming is a technique used to get the gist of the text. After reading the text quickly, stop and ask yourself what the main idea is.  Don’t worry about not remembering details and less important information at this point.  In your exam, some questions depend on your general understanding of the text.

Scanning is about detailed reading.  Other questions in our tests depend on you identifying specific information.

Reading exercises and tests usually include a multiple choice exercise that tests general ideas and main points in each paragraph, and then a more scanning type of text where we need to be quick in finding specific info.

Steps I recommend:

You’ll skip some parts of this technique when you get used to it, however follow all the steps for the time being, till you get enough practice. The more difficult the text is, the more useful the technique is.

 Step 1:   Where we are, what we’re facing

Read the title, the instructions and the comprehension questions. Underline key words in the questions, or wait for that till Step 3.

Step 2:  Skimming the text

Read the text quickly (it should take you a few minutes, a few!, 2, 3…), so as to identify:

–   the kind of text (different texts organize information differently and if we know about that, we can be quicker finding the info we need)

–    the topic

–    and the approach or the main thesis.

Tips: some texts include an introduction and an ending with relevant information to the main idea of the text. Essays and articles include topic sentences at the beginning of each paragraph and sometimes a kind of concluding sentence at the end (they might also contain an introduction to the next point in the next paragraph)

Step 3:   the Questions

If you understood them after step 1(and don’t worry if you didn’t), have another quick look at the key words you underlined.

If you didn’t understand the questions at the beginning (the most likely scenario), read them carefully now, and underline key words.

 Step 4:   First scanning – getting down to work!

Read slowly, carefully. Be aware of which chunks you understand well and which seem to be difficult. Read them all carefully, trying to understand, but don’t spend your whole life on the difficult ones, you’ll go back to those in your second scanning.

So, first answer the easy questions. Re-read carefully the others, thinking about the whole text if necessary (sometimes going back to the whole picture helps us realize what we need to look for).

Tips: You could write on the margin, next to the area where an answer may be, the number of question it answers. This will save you time later on. You can also underline key words/points.

 Step 5:    Second scanning – Think over the parts you didn’t understand

In the second scanning (and third, fourth… if you’re practicing), you should try to solve the hardest parts and answer those questions. Keep in mind something: re-reading the easy parts (much more quickly than the hard parts) may be necessary because those ideas may help us to understand the difficult parts. 

Step 6:   Check all your answers and copy them on the appropriate space

You have to be quick. Read again your answers, including the easy ones, to check everything is OK. In our tests, you usually get 1 minute to copy your answers in the appropriate space for answers.

Readers: Reading and Listening

Books are sometimes available in spoken format. For example, see this one: here

“Readers” consist of a book and a matching cassette tape or CD, set at different levels of English ability

You should always check  out for the cds that come with your text books, they can sometimes be bought separately.

Recommended Readings: Advanced Level

Lies of Silence (thriller) by Brian Moore
Changing places (comedy) by David Lodge
Paradise news (comedy) by David Lodge
Nice work by David Lodge
Small word by David Lodge
The Terrorist (thriller) by John Updike
A Friend of the Family (comedy) by Lisa Jewel
A Long Way Down (comedy) by Nick Hornby
About a Boy (comedy) by Nick Hornby
The Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster
The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster
Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith
Ripley’s Game by Patricia Highsmith
My Sister’s Keeper by Jodi Piccoult
Kiss, Kiss by Roald Dahl
The Pilot’s Wife by Anita Shreve
The Bookseller of Kabul by Asne Seierstad
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
Animal Farm by George Orwell
1984 by George Orwell
Regeneration by Pat Barker (Trilogy: The Ghost Road, The Eye in the Door)
The Promise of Happiness by Justin Cartwright
A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian by Marina Lewycka
The Seven Sisters by Margaret Drabble
The Story of Lucy Gault by William Trevor
Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks (Trilogy: Charlotte Gray, The Girl at the Lion d’Or

In this link you can take a look at some favourite readings, voted by people in book clubs:
http://www.readinggroupguides.com/findaguide/best_of_new.asp

Skimming and Scanning a text

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