Let us test your reading speed!

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Strategies for Taking Standardized Tests
Advertisements

A reading strategy that WORKS.
by “stealing” information from textbooks!
SQ3R: A Reading Technique
Developing Study Skills
Subject: English Language
Reading Textbooks What we’ll be covering: previewing annotating.
Skimming and Scanning.
Advanced Principles: Reading the Multiple- Choice Passages Chapter Two:
Reading Comprehension
ACADEMIC READING Reading for Speed and Content 1.
Reading - Skimming Meeting 12 Matakuliah: G0794/Bahasa Inggris Tahun: 2007.
Reading - Scanning Meeting 13 Matakuliah: G0794/Bahasa Inggris Tahun: 2007.
© 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 2: Active Reading and Learning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 8/e Kathleen T.
Title: Newspaper Project Do Now
Reading Comprehension Skills
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 13: Skimming and Scanning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 7/e Kathleen T. McWhorter.
Reading Techniques.
How to Read and Understand Your Textbook
By CLY Reading Skills Pre-reading While Reading Post-reading.
Reading. Why should I read faster? 1.To be prepared for college/university –You will be reading pages every week. 2.Faster readers comprehend.
Study Skills Tips and Tricks Memory Principals. Objectives Consider the techniques of a powerful memory Organize material as a method of remembering Become.
Skimming, Scanning and Reading for the Main Idea
Understanding Non-fiction Texts Using THIEVES EQ - How can we get meaning from non-fiction texts?
Scanning and Skimming
LITERACY SUCCESS 11 Part B A PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION INNITIATIVE It is recommended that you view the Literacy Success 10 PowerPoint before viewing.
DEPARTMENT :- E.C. DIVISION :- D SUB NAME : C.S. SUB CODE : CHAPTER NAME :- READING FLUENCY PREPAID BY : CHUDASAMA PRUTHVIRAJ GUIDED : RAHUL SIR.
Ch-4 Reading Fluency Presentation By: Kartavya Parmar Guided By: Lect. Rahul Chav.
DIV : E.C SUBJECTNAME :COMMUNICATION SKILL CHAPTER NAME:READING FLUENCY PRIPAID BY : UNJIYA PARAS Guided by :RAHUL SIR CHANU G.K.BHARAD INSTITUTE OF ENGG.
© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 2: Active Reading and Learning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 7/e Kathleen T.
Student Success Test Taking Strategies. Strategies for success on any Test Step 1:Pay attention Pay Attention and make sure that your name is on your.
Reading Skill: Scanning and Skimming
Reading Comprehension
Skimming and Scanning.
1. Reading 2. Writing 3. Listening 4. Speaking Listening and Speaking are used a lot…
Scientific Communication
Strategic Reading Step 2 SCAN. Review from yesterday Preview- practice with Hamlet Oedipal Complex.
©2003 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. Study Skills Topic 14 Reading Rate PowerPoint by JoAnn Yaworski.
Preparing for the ACT Reading Strategies.
© 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 18: Improving Reading Rate and Learning to Skim and Scan College Reading and Study.
Scanning and Skimming
GETTING AROUND NON- FICTION LIKE T.H.I.E.V.E.S. A READING STRATEGY TO HELP YOU SEEK INFORMATION IN YOUR TEXTBOOK AND OTHER NON-FICTION TEXTS.
Learn when the reading skills of skimming and scanning are appropriate. Understand the difference between skimming, scanning, and reading precisely. Practice.
Trash and Treasure How to find Treasure ????? Question Skim & Scan Take Treasure Notes.
Reading Rate (From “The Reader’s Handbook”. What is your reading rat? How many words per minute should a college student read? What should a college student’s.
Before we begin, on a sheet of paper let’s guess what word the numbers spell out. To figure this out, you must write the letter to each of the numbers.
You can use the scanning technique to look up a phone number, read through the small ads in a newspaper, or for browsing television schedules, timetables,
© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Skimming and Scanning.
Smart Reading Strategies Webinar Presentation. How to use this recording Watch Do activities Webinar slides & further resources:
Mrs. Paloti SAT Prep  They are designed to test a student’s ability to comprehend the passage they read and are not intended to test for knowledge,
Making Predictions In Science Created by Elizabeth Champlin 2010 Created by Elizabeth Champlin 2010.
Tips on how to improve your study and homework time.
1 INSIGHT ON EFFECIVE READING SKILLS Rotimi Taiwo (PhD)
In Concert: An Integrated Reading and Writing Approach by Kathleen T. McWhorter.
PRE-READING SKILLS: Surveying, Skimming, Scanning
Skimming and scanning. Skimming is a reading technique that can help you to:  read more quickly  decide if the text is interesting and whether you should.
© 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 13: Skimming and Scanning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 8/e Kathleen T. McWhorter.
U2 – KU120 Pre-Reading Strategies Angela Lavine, PhD.
ACT Strategies: Skimming & Scanning Mrs. M. Kleimola East Aurora High School Spring 2013.
Making the Most of Your Textbook
Reading Strategies Week Five.
Reading Comprehension Skills
How to read text for understanding
Academic Advising and Learning Resource Center
Reading & Annotating Text for Better Understanding
Getting Around Non-Fiction like
Let us test your reading speed!
Preview your reading with this strategy!!!!!!!
Basic Academic Reading Strategies
Presentation transcript:

Let us test your reading speed! Can you read my mind? Scanning and Skimming Let us test your reading speed! http://www.readingdynamicsrsa.com/speedtest.htm Yasmeen Shakoor ATHS RAK

Skimming and scanning are especially valuable when there is only one item of information that you need to find from a particular passage. Skimming and scanning are very rapid reading methods in which you glance at a passage to find specific information. These reading methods make it easier for you to grasp large amounts of material, especially when you're previewing. They are also useful when you don't need to know every word.

Read the introduction or the first paragraph. Skimming refers to the process of reading only main ideas within a passage to get an overall impression of the content of a reading selection. An example of this is when we read the title of a newspaper to know what happens everyday. How to skim: Read the title. Read the introduction or the first paragraph. Read the first sentence of every other paragraph. Notice any pictures, charts, or graphs. * Notice any italicized or boldface words or phrases. Read the summary or last paragraph.

State the specific information you are looking for. Scanning is a reading technique to be used when you want to find specific information quickly. In scanning you have a question in your mind and you read a passage only to find the answer, ignoring unrelated information. How to scan: State the specific information you are looking for. Try to anticipate how the answer will appear and what clues you might use to help you locate the answer. For example, if you were looking for a certain date, you would quickly read the paragraph looking only for numbers. Use headings and any other aids that will help you identify which sections might contain the information you are looking for. Selectively read and skip through sections of the passage.

Skim and Scan this special note in 30 seconds When you skim and scan, you need to cover everything, even titles, subtitles, side features, and visuals. That bit of information you need may not be tidily packaged in a paragraph, so you need to check the entire page--not just the main body of the text, there are also many visual clues that help you to find information. Heads and subheads break up the text and identify the content of each part. Where key terms are introduced and defined, they appear in boldface type. Graphs and charts have titles and/or captions that tell you what they are about. These clues will help you to find information. . . but only if you use them. Cover everything Check entire page Visual clues Graphs, charts have titles/captions

SW: Skim and Scan the text: A newly published report indicates that jogging could have adverse health effects, especially for those who do it alone. A team of researchers from Harvard University has suggested that going for a run on your own is not as healthy as previously believed and is nowhere near as beneficial as jogging as part of a group. They suggested it could actually be detrimental to one’s health. Experiments conducted on rats indicated that running alone raises stress levels and stifles brain cell regeneration. Professor Elizabeth Gould, who led the research, said: “These results suggest that, in the absence of social interaction, a normally beneficial experience can exert a potentially deleterious influence on the brain.”

The researchers monitored two groups of rats on exercise wheels The researchers monitored two groups of rats on exercise wheels. One group exercised alone, the other as part of a rodent jogging team. After two weeks, the scientists conducted tests to ascertain the rate of brain cell growth in all of the test animals. The results revealed that the communal joggers had double the amount of new brain cells as the solo runners. Professor Gould concluded that: “When experienced in a group setting, running stimulates neurogenesis (brain cell growth). However, when running occurs in social isolation, these positive effects are suppressed.” Joggers around the world should perhaps take the research with a pinch of salt and remember that jogging is healthier than the rat race.

Part 1: Skimming Answer the following questions using your own words but taking into account the information in the text. According to the text, is jogging alone beneficial for our health? Why? Has this piece of research been tested on humans? 2. Choose a, b or c in each question below. Only one choice is correct. Some Harvard researchers claim that jogging alone a. is not healthy. b. is as healthy as it was thought. c. is not as healthy as it was thought. Jogging alone.. increases the production of brain cells. increases the size of the brain. c. reduces the production of brain cells.

Part 2: Scanning Are the following statements TRUE or FALSE? Identify the part of the text that supports your answer. Jogging with rats stimulates the brain cell production: ________ Evidence: b. Jogging rats produce more brain cells if they do it in group: ________ Answer the following questions: c. What does professor Gould says about the results of this experiment? d. What were her conclusions?