Reading Strategies, Part 3: From Test-Taking Strategies and Study Skills
Reading Strategies, Part 3: From Test-Taking Strategies and Study Skills
• Contrast clues tell you what something isn’t rather than what it is.
Often, you’ll find contrast clues set off with unlike, nor, or instead of
• Common sense clues encourage you to use what you already know to
define the word.
Boost Your Vocabulary
3. Words you’ve seen only once or never.
• In nearly everything you read, you’ll find words
that are completely new to you. If you can’t
figure out these words through context clues
and they are crucial to the meaning, it pays to
stop reading and look them up in a dictionary.
• Keep a word journal, writing down all the new
vocabulary you collect in this way. The simple
act of writing the words can help fix them in
your mind.
Boost Your Vocabulary
Directions:
Complete the skimming practice
activity in Exercise 1: Boost Your
Vocabulary on the handout entitled “Be a
Power Reader.”
Use Structure Clues
• Identifying the structure of a reading selection can also
help you increase your comprehension.
• Fiction is structured according to chronological order,
the order of time. Events are arranged from first to last,
as on a timeline.
• Fiction writers often use dates to show the order of
events.
• In addition, writers can use time-order words to show
when events happen: after, at length, before, currently,
during, eventually, first, second, third (and so on)
finally, immediately, in the future, later, meanwhile,
next, now, soon, subsequently, then, today.
Use Structure Clues
• Nonfiction articles are often arranged in one of
three ways: chronological order, cause-and-
effect order, or comparison-and-contrast order.
• Cause-and-effect order shows the reason
something happened (the cause) and the results
(the effect). Signal words include as a result,
because, consequently, due to, for, for this
(that) reason, if. . . then, nevertheless, since,
so, so that, therefore, thus, this (that) is how.
• Comparison-and-contrast order shows how two
people, places, or things are the same
(comparison) and different (contrast)
Use Structure Clues
Directions:
Complete the skimming practice
activity in Exercise 2: Use Structure Clues
on the handout entitled “Be a Power
Reader.”
Determine Your Reading Speed
and Comprehension
• To determine your present reading speed,
read the selection, “Power to the People,”
(Exercise 3 on the handout entitled “Be a
Power Reader”) for precisely one minute.
Then note the line at which you stopped
reading and multiply that number by 10
(the average number of words per line).
This is your initial reading speed.
Determine Your Reading Speed
and Comprehension
•Use the chart below to determine your relative
reading speed:
Reading Speed
500 - 1500 words per minute = speed
reader
250 words per minute = average
reader
150 words per minute = average
speaker
Determine Your Reading Speed
and Comprehension
• Reading fast is useless if you don’t
understand what you read. To determine
your present level of comprehension,
allow yourself 15 minutes to read “Power
to the People” and then answer the
questions that follow (see Exercise 3 on
the handout entitled “Be a Power Reader).
Determine Your Reading Speed
and Comprehension
• After reading “Power to the People” and
answering the questions, score yourself by
using the answer key below and chart on
the next slide to determine how well you
understood the main idea.
Answers:
1.a 2. d 3. d 4. c 5. b
6. c 7. c 8. a 9. b l0. d
Determine Your Reading Speed
and Comprehension
•Use the chart below to determine your relative
reading comprehension:
Reading Comprehension
Excellent comprehension = 9 - 10
correct
Above average comprehension = 7-8
correct
Average comprehension = 5-6
correct
Below average comprehension = 0-4
correct
Skim a Passage to Pump Up Your
Reading Speed
When you need a general idea of a text and you don’t have
the time to read in depth, skimming is the answer.
Skim a Passage to Pump Up Your
Reading Speed
• Skimming is a very fast way to read.
• Skimming allows you to glance at a passage to
find specific information.
• This method is especially useful when there are
only a few items of information that you want
from a particular passage.
• It is not recommended as a substitute for
studying a text in depth.
• Here are two different ways that you can skim a
passage.
Skim a Passage to Pump Up Your
Reading Speed
Here are two different ways that you can skim a passage.
Method 2: Crisscross
•First scan from the top left corner to the bottom right
corner.
•Then scan from the top right corner to the bottom left
corner.
Skim a Passage to Pump Up Your Reading
Speed
Directions:
Complete the skimming practice
activity in Exercise 4: Skim a Passage for
Reading Speed on the handout entitled
“Be a Power Reader.”
Skim a Passage to Pump Up Your Reading
Speed
Directions:
Complete the hand-eye techniques
practice activity in Exercise 5: Hand-Eye
Techniques for Speed Reading on the
handout entitled “Be a Power Reader.”
Increase Your Comprehension
by Reading on Three Levels
• When you read, the full meaning of a text
emerges on three levels:
• the literal,
• the inferential,
• and the evaluative.
• You will get more from a text if you learn
to read on all three levels. Here’s how to
read for levels of meaning.
Increase Your Comprehension
by Reading on Three Levels
• Here’s how to read for levels of meaning.
Directions:
Complete the practice activity in
Exercise 6: Combining Techniques for
Speed Reading on the handout entitled
“Be a Power Reader.”
Final Practice to Increase Reading
Speed
Answers:
1. b 6. d
2. e 7. b
3. a 8. a
4. d 9. e
5. a 10. b