Objectives
- Contrast academic reading with reading for pleasure
- Distinguish between active and passive reading
- Utilize different academic reading strategies that help students learn from what they read
- Learn to align reading strategies with levels of understanding required by the assignment and/or course objectives
- Understand the importance of purpose in a reading assignment
- Examine factors that affect comprehension, such as environment, context, preparation, and review.
Instructor Resources
Sellers, D., Dochen, C., and Hodges R (2015). Academic Transformation: The Road to College Success (pp 63-69). Pearson.
Pauk, W., and Owens, RJQ. (2008). How to study in college (pp. 106-170). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. http://college.cengage.com/psychology/bernstein/essentials/4e/assets/students/succeed/ch_01.pdf
Summary of Actions
- Introduce the session with this video (4:24) and/or slides.
- Distinguish between academic reading and pleasure-reading and stress the importance of reading skills to academic success.
- Ask students if they have ever thought about different ways to read or reading strategies; encourage metacognition.
- Introduce different reading strategies (Reading for Success; Reading Strategies—KWL Method; Reading Strategies—SQ3R Method).
- Summarize what all reading strategies have in common (preview, active reading, review).
- Discuss Bloom’s taxonomy to highlight different levels of understanding and the potential of what students can do with knowledge they acquire.
- Model SQ3R Reading Strategy using history textbook passage.
- Model active reading strategies using the maritime expansion passage.
- Have students apply the SQ3R or KWL reading method to the POLS textbook excerpt.
- Discuss.