Saturday, January 28, 2012

Reading Skill

Curriculum and Instruction in English 2
Reading Skill



Reading is one of the ways of learning English or other languages. There are reading tasks in tests, exams and during learning process. In this post I offer the readers some typical ways of presenting reading tasks and reading activities for learners of foreign language according to PWP Model.


Pre-Reading Activities
- Doing reading preference survey, reading activity survey
Semantic mappingDiscussion activities (“what does this word, picture, object make you think of?”)
Telling a storyRelating experiences associated with reading theme (“this story reminds me of…”)
Explaining a concept or process (“How does xxx work?”)
Asking students to explain a concept or process
Describing an object that you bring in
Keying on vocabulary from other pre-reading activities
Taking a position (on a statement or a quote)
Consensus forming (making choices as groups)
Quick writing on a topic or a key word
Taking a topical survey (what do all the people in the class think about xxx?)
Making a questionnaire (group activity)
Writing up survey/questionnaire results (group activity)
Filling in a flow chart
Filling in a modified cloze passage
Guessing text genre from the title (why is text organized in a certain way?)
Skimming in order to choose/make-up best title
Posing questions about a topic (teacher or students) (know, want to know, have learned)
Ordering chapter headings in order of perceived interest
Ordering chapter sub-heading to predict arrangement of information
Reading a letter that takes some perspective on the text, have students identify the writer
Relating a topic to general course content
Reading an excerpt—predicting the rest of the text
Asking for and finding specific facts (coordinate with scanning activity)
Writing a reaction or opinion after a discussion
Listening to a lecture and taking notes, using the notes to compare with a section of a reading
Looking at pictures, captions, and/or headings and then discussing or predicting
Reading first sentences of each paragraph and predict
Finding definitions
Reading only sub-headings for discussion
Reading only underlined sentences for discussion (teacher underlines)
Seeing a film, video, slide set, picture sequence, TV show in order to discuss, write, debate
Bringing in a person to talk to the class
Taking a short excursion to a relevant location


While-Reading Activities
What comes next? List the possibilities
Provide two summaries, which is most accurate so far?
Give alternative chapter/section headingsUse map, chart, table, etc. to outline progress so far
Ask students to elaborate on some part of the text just read: a process, description, story, etc.
Fill in skeleton story line up to the point of reading, same with outline—ask what will come next
Do a flyer, poster, ad, or announcement based on reading to date
Correct a summary full of errorsList sequence of events or steps in correct order as a chartMake a news story from reading-to-date; report as reading unfolds
Playmaking, role-playingListen to a lecture excerpt related to a section just read, or to be read
Make statements about the reading; have the students rate the statements for accuracy, opinion
Ask questions, give definitions, focus on vocabulary—students find words they want to remember
Give information for next section; students make appropriate questions


Post-Reading Activities
Scanning for key vocabulary; given definition, have them find other occurrences
Fill in or draw grids, charts, maps, tables, outlines
Expand or change a semantic map
Ask questionsETR (relate Experience, read Text, Relate experiences to text)
Write a reaction (express opinion)
Connect with information from other articles
Match informationT/F statementsFix wrong information in a summary
Listen to lecture and connect to reading; note points of difference, points of similarity
Write a summary, fill in a summary
Students take/make sentences, state as T/F, other students get points if agree with right answer
Report on reading from different frames (reporter, professional, editor, colleague)
Ranking of importance of information in reading (start with a list of statements about reading)
Flow chart the information
Decide what information can be eliminated (have lists of statements)
What is the attitude/viewpoint of the writer, what is the genre of the text, who is the audience? How do you know?
List examples that appear in text; what would be better examples for the students?
Write a reaction evaluation as groupsWrite newspaper headlinesWrite sub-headings for text sections

Credit: http://passexam.cc.ua/reading-activities-pre-while-and-postreading-activities

Example of Reading Skill
Lesson Plan: Click Here
Power Point: Click Here

Reading
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