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The Effective Reader (Updated Edition) by D. J. Henry

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1 The Effective Reader (Updated Edition) by D. J. Henry
Chapter 1: A Reading System for Effective Readers PowerPoint Presentation by Gretchen Starks-Martin St. Cloud State University, MN © 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers

2 The Reading Process Comprehension is an understanding of what has been read. The most important aspect of being an effective reader is being an active reader. Active reading means that you ask questions, find answers, and react to the author’s ideas.

3 Prior Knowledge Prior knowledge is the large body of information that is learned throughout a lifetime of experience. The more prior knowledge you have about a topic, the more likely you are to understand that topic. This is why effective readers build their knowledge base by reading often!

4 The Reading Process Effective readers break reading into a three-step process: Before reading, look over or preview the material. Ask questions about the material you are about to read. During reading, test your understanding of the material. After reading, review and react to what you have learned.

5 SQ3R Reading Process Survey Question Read Recite Review

6 SQ3R Before Reading Survey or skim the reading passage for organization and what it is going to talk about. Look at the following: Italics Boldface type Titles, introductions, headings Pictures and graphs First paragraph, summaries, questions

7 SQ3R Before Reading Ask Questions before you read.
What is the passage about? How is the material organized? What do I already know? What is my prior knowledge? What is my purpose for reading? What is my reading plan? What are the most important parts to remember?

8 SQ3R During Reading Read. Continue to ask questions.
Does the information agree with what I already knew? Do I need to change what I thought I knew? What is the significance of this information? Do I need to remember this?

9 SQ3R During Reading Read. Continue to ask questions.
Form questions from headings, subheadings, words in bold print and italics. Reread parts you don’t understand Reread when your mind drifts during reading. Read ahead to see if the idea becomes clearer. Determine the meaning of words from context. Look up new or difficult words. Think about ideas even when they differ from your own.

10 SQ3R During Reading Recite.
Make sure you understand by repeating the information. Create a picture in your mind or on paper. Restate the ideas in your own words. Write out answers to the questions you created based on the headings and subheadings.

11 SQ3R After Reading Review. Go back over the material to review it.
Summarize the most important parts. Revisit the answers to your questions. Review new words and their meanings. Think and write about what you have read.

12 SQ3R After Reading Review.
Connect new information to your prior knowledge about the topic. Form opinions about the material and the author. Notice changes in your opinions based on the new information. Write about what you have read.

13 Chapter Review Prior knowledge is the body of information that is learned throughout a lifetime of experience. Comprehension is an understanding of information. SQ3R stands for Survey, Question, Read, Recite, and Review.

14 Chapter Review Effective readers divide the reading process into the following three phases: Before reading During reading After reading

15 Practice Complete the Applications, Review Tests, and Mastery Tests for Chapter 1 in your textbook. *Remember to complete your scorecard for the Review Tests in this chapter.


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