This chapter reviews related literature on reading. It discusses reading as one of the four important language skills that students should master. Reading provides a way for students to gain knowledge and is important in educational and daily life settings. There are two main types of reading: intensive reading, which is done aloud to gain specific information; and extensive reading, which is silent reading done for pleasure or to update one's general knowledge. The reading process involves three main stages - recognition of words, understanding syntactic relationships, and interpreting meanings in context. Comprehension is the ultimate goal of reading, which requires combining information from the text with the reader's prior knowledge. Effective reading involves several complex cognitive skills and strategies.
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Review of Related Literature
This chapter reviews related literature on reading. It discusses reading as one of the four important language skills that students should master. Reading provides a way for students to gain knowledge and is important in educational and daily life settings. There are two main types of reading: intensive reading, which is done aloud to gain specific information; and extensive reading, which is silent reading done for pleasure or to update one's general knowledge. The reading process involves three main stages - recognition of words, understanding syntactic relationships, and interpreting meanings in context. Comprehension is the ultimate goal of reading, which requires combining information from the text with the reader's prior knowledge. Effective reading involves several complex cognitive skills and strategies.
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CHAPTER II
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
This chapter discusses the related literature of this
study that will support and provide the historical background of the topic.
Reading is one of four important language skills that
should be mastered by students. It is one of the ways for getting knowledge that cannot be separated from every learning process and it does not only happen in educational field but also in our daily life. For getting knowledge and information, people read books, magazines, newspapers, advertisement and etc. Nation states that reading is a source of learning and enjoyment. It can help students learn a new vocabulary and grammar. It also makes them enjoy the reading. They can learn more and more by reading. According to Richard, reading means perceiving a written text in order to understand its contents. This can be done silently (silent reading). It is a particular way in which the readers understand texts, passages, paragraphs even books and an ability to understand and find out the information presented in the form of written text.
I. S. P. Nation , Teaching ESL/EFL Reading and Writing (New York: Rout
ledge, 2009), p. 49. 2 Jack C. Richards and Richard Schmidt , Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics ( London: Pearson Education, 2002 ), p.443. In addition, Goodman in Majdi Abdullah Ahmad defines reading as a receptive process of written communication. According to him reading begins with a linguistic surface expression encoded by a writer and ends with meaning in which the reader decoded. On the other hand, Grebe states that reading is not merely a receptive process of picking up information from the page in a verbatim manner but it is a selective process which is characterized as an active process of comprehending. Reading can be seen as an “interactive” process between a reader and a text which leads to automaticity. It is a dynamic process in which the reader works actively to construct meaning from the material. In this process, the reader interacts dynamically with the text as he or she tries to elicit the meaning. Therefore, Students must be able to adjust their reading to fit the type of material being presented. Effective readers are involved in the process of reading and look for meaning actively. Ineffective readers play a passive role during reading. They do not connect the text material with their prior knowledge. In other words, students can combine their background knowledge with the information from the text while reading. It can help students in understanding the text easily.
Majdi Abdullah Ahmad AD-Heisat , “ The Use of Reading Strategies in
Developing Students’ Reading Competency among Primary School Teachers in Malaysia ”. European Journal of Social Sciences – Vol 12, N0 2 (2009), p. 31. 4 Ibid. 5 Hesham Suleiman Alyousef, “ Teaching Reading Comprehension to Eel/Efl Learners ”, The Reading Matrix , Vol. 5, No. 2(2005), p.144. 6 Lynne Bell , “ Using Reading in Content Area Strategies to Improve Student Understanding In Family and Consumer Sciences”. Vol. 23, No. 2, Fall/Winter, (2005), p. 1 According to Patel, Reading is the most useful and important skill. It is a source of joys and good reading keeps students regular in reading which provide them pleasure and profit. Reading makes students enjoy their learning process and gives several advantages in finding some information that is needed. It is an unlimited area that makes students know everything, such as education, politic, social, culture, religion, health and etc. All of that information can be obtained by reading. W. S. Gray in Patel notes Reading is a form of experience. It brings students in contact with the minds of great authors, with the written account of their experiences. Reading is necessary in language learning. It is not only a source of information and a pleasurable activity but also as a means of consolidating and extending one's knowledge of the language. It is an important activity for expanding knowledge of language. Students can increase their knowledge and update their information.
According to Patel and Preven there are two types of
reading, they are: a. Intensive reading. It is aloud reading. In this type, the reader or learner reads the text to get knowledge and carry out the specific information. b. Extensive reading is silent reading. It is reading for pleasure. The reader wants to know about something. He does not care about specific or important information after reading. The purpose of this type is to update reader‟s knowledge. Based on the type of reading above, a reader has to know what type of reading that is used. Because each type of reading has different purposes. There are several stages in reading process. They are:
a. The first stage is 'the recognition stage'. At this
stage the student simply recognizes the graphic counterparts of the phonological items. For instance, he recognizes the spoken words in its written form. The difficulty of this stage depends upon the differences between the script of the student's mother tongue and English, and the differences between the spelling conventions of two languages.
b. The second stage is the 'structuring stage.' The
learner sees the syntactic relationship of the items and understands the structural meaning of the syntactical units.
c . The third stage is the 'interpretation stage'. This
is the highest level in the process of reading. The learners comprehend the significance of a word, a phrase, or a sentence in the overall context of the unnecessary information. For instance, he comprehends the serious and jocular use of words, distinguishes between a statement of fact and a statement of opinion. It is this stage at which a person really reads for information or for pleasure.
M. F.Patel and Praveen M. Jain, English Language Teaching (Jaipur:
Sunrise Publisher, 2008), p. 113. 8 Ibid, p. 114 9 Ibid Reading can not be separated from comprehension because the purpose of reading activity is to comprehend what has been read. According to Celce-Murcia, reading is taking general comprehension as the example requires that the reader draws information from a text and combines it with information and expectations that a reader already has. Reading comprehension is the ability to understand a written passage of text. It is defined as the level of understanding of a text or message. Reading comprehension is essentially the ability to understand what has been read by readers. Chiara Meneghetti et al, define reading comprehension is a complex cognitive ability requiring the capacity to integrate text information with the knowledge of a listener or a reader and resulting in the elaboration of a mental representation. Reading comprehension involves much more than readers‟ responses to text. It is a multicomponent, complex process that involves many interactions between readers and what they bring to the text or background knowledge as well as variables related to the text itself (interest in text, understanding of text types). It involves a complicated process.
Marianne Celce-Murcia, Teaching English As A Second Language And
Foreign Language (New York: Heinle, 2001), p. 154. According to Grabe in Celce-Murcia there are six general component skills and knowledge areas of complex reading process. They are:
a. Automatic recognition skill: a virtually unconscious
ability, ideally requiring little mental processing to recognize text, especially for word identification.
b. Vocabulary and structural knowledge: a second
understanding of language structure and large recognition vocabulary.
c. Formal discourse structure knowledge: an understanding
of how texts are recognized and how information is put together into various genres of text
d. Content or world background knowledge, prior knowledge
of text related information and a shared understanding of the cultural information involved in text.
e. Synthesis and evaluation skill or strategies: the
ability to read and to compare the information from multiple sources, to think critically about what one reads, and to decide what information is relevant or useful for one‟s purpose.
f. Metacognitive knowledge and skill monitoring: an
awareness of one‟s mental process and the ability to reflect on what one is doing and the strategies one is employing while reading. Chiara Meneghetti et al, Components of reading comprehension and scholastic achievement (Padova Italy: University of Padova, 2006), P. 1. 14 Janette K. Klinger, et al, Teaching Reading Comprehension to Students With The Learning Difficulties ( New York: The Guildford Press, 207), p.8 15 Celce-Murcia, loc.cit