of English and Journalism Cuyahoga Community College

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Presentation transcript:

of English and Journalism Cuyahoga Community College Active Reading By Emanuel Hughley Jr. Assistant Professor of English and Journalism Cuyahoga Community College Highland Hills , Ohio

What is active reading? A strategy that gets reader involved with material. Helps reader understand the author’s opinion about the topic of the reading selection. Helps reader form judgments about material that is read. Best suited for reading that emphasizes the author’s concepts and opinions based on facts gathered through research and observation. Short stories Novels Magazine articles Editorials or opinion pieces Process that develops critical thinking skills Analysis Synthesis Evaluation

Active reading questions Active readers must answer eight questions. What is the author’s main idea? What main points support the main idea? Is the support adequate and convincing? Is the author expressing facts, opinions or both? What is the author’s tone/attitude? What is the author’s purpose? Who is the author’s intended audience? What is the source of the author’s detail?

Active reading questions What is the author’s main idea? What is the topic of the article? What is the author’s opinion of that topic? What main points support the main idea? What reasons or examples does the author give that help to explain his/her opinion about the topic.

Active reading questions Is the support adequate and convincing? Does the author give reasons that make sense? Does the author give more than one reason? Is the author expressing facts, opinions or both? Facts are exact details. Facts are specific information. Facts can be proven to be true.

Active reading questions What is the author’s tone/attitude? Serious? Sarcastic? Preachy? Humorous? Angry Insulting?

Active reading questions What is the author’s purpose? To share? To inform? To entertain? To persuade Who is the author’s intended audience? Is the author writing to the general public? Is the author writing to a special audience? What is the source of the author’s detail? Observation Personal experience? Research? Reasoning?

Answering active reader questions Students should complete four steps to find the answers to the eight active reader questions. Surveying Uninterrupted reading Studied reading Review

First step of active reading Surveying Check the title What does title tell you about what you will be reading? Who is the author? Has instructor said anything about the author? Look through the material Headings Boldface type Italics Lists

First step of active reading Surveying Read the opening and closing paragraphs. What clues do these provide about content and writer’s purpose? Read first sentence of each paragraph. What clues these provide about the content? Once readers have surveyed material they will have a sense of what to expect when the material is read in detail.

Second step of active reading Uninterrupted reading Read material quickly, but attentively without stopping. Circle words in the passage you don’t understand to check later. Place question mark next to material you don’t understand. Keep going Try to determine the writer’s main point. After completing this step, write as many answers to active reader questions that you can. Look up every word that you have circled and write meaning in the margin near the circled word. Take a short break, if you feel you need one.

Third step of active reading Studied reading Underline author’s thesis (main point) if it is stated. Identify the sentences that express the author’s opinion about the topic. Also underline the main points that support the thesis. Identify the sentences that explain the reason for the author’s opinion. As you read, record your observations Personal comments Note your agreement or disagreement After this reading, answer remaining active reader questions.

Fourth step of active reading Review Close your book and try to answer each of the eight active reader questions. Answers to these questions form a summary of the material you just read. Or recite the answers to active reader questions to another person. Following this reading strategy should help students to understand most author’s concepts and opinions.