One of the first things you learn about teaching is that there
are different reading techniques and
the students should be aware of which technique is most suited, depending on
the reading task required by the text or by their teacher.
Training students to know their reading techniques and deduce when best to apply them is
indeed important, especially under exam conditions when time constraints come
into play and decisions need to be made depending on time availability and the
importance of the task at hand.
The four main types of reading techniques are the following:
·
Skimming
·
Scanning
·
Intensive
·
Extensive
Skimming
Skimming is sometimes referred to as gist reading. Skimming may
help in order to know what the text is about at its most basic level. You might
typically do this with a magazine or newspaper and would help you mentally and
quickly shortlist those articles which you might consider for a deeper read.
You might typically skim to search for a name in a telephone directory.
You can reach a speed count of even 700 words per minute if you
train yourself well in this particular method. Comprehension is of course very
low and understanding of overall content very superficial.
Scanning
Picture yourself visiting a historical city, guide book in hand.
You would most probably just scan the guide book to see which site you might
want to visit. Scanning involves getting your eyes to quickly scuttle across
sentence and is used to get just a simple piece of information. Interestingly,
research has concluded that reading off a computer screen actually inhibits the
pathways to effective scanning and thus, reading of paper is far more conducive
to speedy comprehension of texts.
Something students sometimes do not give enough importance to is
illustrations. These should be included in your scanning. Special attention to
the introduction and the conclusion should also be paid.
Intensive
Reading
You need
to have your aims clear in mind when undertaking intensive reading. Remember
this is going to be far more time consuming than scanning or skimming. If you
need to list the chronology of events in a long passage, you will need to read
it intensively. This type of reading has indeed beneficial to language learners
as it helps them understand vocabulary by deducing the meaning of words in
context. It moreover, helps with retention of information for long periods of
time and knowledge resulting from intensive reading persists in your long term
memory.
This is one reason why reading huge amounts of information just
before an exam does not work very well. When students do this, they undertake
neither type of reading process effectively, especially neglecting intensive
reading. They may remember the answers in an exam but will likely forget
everything soon afterwards.
Extensive
reading
Extensive reading involves reading for pleasure. Because there
is an element of enjoyment in extensive reading it is unlikely that students
will undertake extensive reading of a text they do not like. It also requires a
fluid decoding and assimilation of the text and content in front of you. If the
text is difficult and you stop every few minutes to figure out what is being
said or to look up new words in the dictionary, you are breaking your
concentration and diverting your thoughts.
Is
the ability to learn and assimilate information genetic?
It is not uncommon for people to associate intelligent or bright
kids with their equally intelligent parents. Often children of parents
exercising a profession appear to be more intelligent. However, it is important
to note first and foremost, that academic intelligence is only one form of
intelligence and even a university professor who scores high on academic
intelligence, might be the most impractical person, finding it difficult to
pragmatically solve problems to simple everyday tasks. The notion of
intelligence is an extremely complex and diverse one and to pin it into just a
single word means whipping out the multitude of connotations and meanings that
it actually embodies.
Scientists have found no plausible relationship between our
genes and our ability to learn or our intelligence. There is no genetic DNA
test that can predict intelligence because intelligence is due to your
environment. It is likely that children with parents who exercise a profession
appear more intelligent because their parents directly or directly encourage
it. Likely, it is also evident that parents who neglect their children and do
not enforce their schooling commitments (doing their homework, study periods
etc) will perform less well in school and appear “less intelligent”.
Again, it is evident why children who have had no opportunity for
schooling might be considered anything but “intelligent”.
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