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Published byCoral Sutton Modified over 9 years ago
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ACTIVE READING STRATEGIES
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Active reading strategies aim to: Engage students with their reading through practical activities, increasing their reading stamina. Direct students to read for meaning.
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Active reading strategies are especially useful for: Students who read superficially rather than engaging with meaning, this is a common problem for EAL students. Students who struggle to maintain concentration when reading longer texts.
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Three active reading strategies for the classroom The following strategies are most effective when worked on by a pair or small group, as group discussion leads to a closer look at the text.
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Text Marking Students underline a limited number of key points when reading a complex text. Students write a paragraph heading which sums up the information in selected paragraphs of a long text. Students categorise information by highlighting it in different colours.
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Text Marking in History In pairs read the following information about Roman Food. Underline in different colours the foods eaten by wealthy people and those eaten by ordinary people.
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Sequencing Students work in groups to reconstruct a text which has been cut into chunks.
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Sequencing in Geography Re-order the sentences to make a coherent paragraph. Highlight the words which helped you do this. Give your paragraph a title.
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Text restructuring Students read and remodel information in another format e.g. flow charts, maps, grids, Venn diagrams.
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Re-structuring in Science Match and sequence the given information on fossil fuels to form a diagram explaining how fossil fuels were created.
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Active reading strategies develop student’s ability to Read for meaning. Extract relevant points from a long and complex text. Understand how texts are put together. Deepen their understanding by re- working what they know in a new way.
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