A Short Analysis of The Nature of Reading: Bottom-Up Model
A Short Analysis of The Nature of Reading: Bottom-Up Model
Top-down Model
A top-down reading model is a reading approach that emphasizes what the reader
brings to the text, it contends that reading is driven by meaning and proceeds from
whole to part. It is also known as concept-driven model. To these theorists (e.g.
Goodman, 1967; Smith, 1971), efficient reading doesn't result from the precise
perception and identification of all the elements in a word, but from skills in selecting the
fewest, most productive cues necessary. They contend that readers have a prior sense
of what could be meaningful in the text, based upon their previous experiences and their
knowledge about language. Readers are not, in their view, confined only to one source
of informationthe letters before their eyes, but have at their disposal two other
important kinds of information which are available at the same time: semantic cues
(meaning), and syntactic cues (grammatical or sentence sense). Thus, what readers
bring to the text separately in terms of both their prior knowledge of the topic and their
knowledge about the language assists them in predicting what the upcoming words will
be. Readers sample the print, assign a tentative hypothesis about the identity of the
upcoming word and use meaning to confirm their prediction. If meaning is constructed,
readers resample the text and form a new hypothesis. Thus readers need to only briefly
sample the marks on the page in order to confirm word identity. In this model it is
evident that the flow of information proceeds from the top downward so that the process
of word identification is dependent upon meaning first. Thus the higher level processes
embodied in past experiences and the reader's knowledge of the language pattern
interact with and direct the flow of information, just as listeners may anticipate what the
upcoming words of speakers might be. This view identifies reading as a kind of
psycholinguistic guessing game(Goodman, 1967). A representation of the top-down
process is depicted in the following figure.
The top-down model centers upon the assumption that good readers bypass the
letter sound correspondence when they read because they read so quickly. That is,
because good readers read at a faster speed, they do not depend upon the phonemic
code. However, this view is also challenged. Recent evidence presented by Stanovich
(1980) discredits this assumption. A lot of research suggests that instead of depending
on meaning only, good readers may well markedly attend to graphic information,
especially when they are uncertain about a word. Contrary to the view of the top-down
theorists, good readers do rely on graphic information, which may be more efficient than
endeavouring to predict words based only upon context and language structure.
Moreover, the fact that good readers make better use of contextual clues than poor
readers is not evidence that they actually do so in reading. Good readers use context
only when orthographic and phonemic cues are minimal. Despite the view of top-down
theorists then, it would appear that even as readers become more accomplished they
still employ data-driven strategies to unlock words.
Interactive Model
Since neither the bottom-up nor top-down model of the reading process totally
accounts for what occurs during the reading process, Rumelhart (1977) proposes an
interactive model in which both letter features or data-driven sensory information and