Lecture 1 Reading - An Introduction
Lecture 1 Reading - An Introduction
AN INTRODUCTION
TSL 591
LECTURE 1
DEFINITION OF READING
WHAT DO WE READ?
VARIOUS FORMS OF PRINTED & ELECTRONIC
MATERIALS SEEN OR SENSED
LETTERS, SYMBOLS, PICTURES
CODE
DECODE
READING IS
A complex conscious and unconscious mental
process in which the reader uses a variety of
strategies to reconstruct the meaning that the author
is assumed to have intended, based on data from the
text and from the readers prior knowledge
(Mikulecky, 2011)
Cont.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
A flexible process
A purposeful process
An evaluative process
A learning process
A linguistic process
TYPES OF READER
Experienced readers make judgments during
activity about the degree of care and
attention which the material warrants.
Effective reading means a flexible and
appropriate response to the material in hand,
and this is always guided by the readers
purpose.
Cont.
5. Make use of redundancies orthographic, syntactic,
and/or semantic repetitions of information to reduce
uncertainty about meaning.
6. Maintain enough speed to overcome the limitations of
visual processing and memory systems.
7. Constantly switch their thoughts back and forth
between the text and what they already know in an
effort to understand.
Cont.
When L2 students read specific texts in
classroom contexts, they will engage in
varying types of reading that reflect differing
tasks, texts, and instructional objectives the
problems may not be an inability to
comprehend but a lack of awareness of the
real goals for that reading task.
Cont.
The various components of a complex
definition for skilled reading suggest that longterm curricular goals for L2 need to address
relevant language-knowledge resources.