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Skimming and Scanning

Skimming allows readers to quickly obtain the main ideas of a text in order to determine if it is interesting or useful to read more thoroughly. It involves reading titles, subtitles, and first and last sentences of paragraphs. Scanning is used to find specific information by quickly moving the eyes across a text without reading every word. Both skimming and scanning are fast reading techniques that can help locate information when there is not time to read an entire text carefully.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views7 pages

Skimming and Scanning

Skimming allows readers to quickly obtain the main ideas of a text in order to determine if it is interesting or useful to read more thoroughly. It involves reading titles, subtitles, and first and last sentences of paragraphs. Scanning is used to find specific information by quickly moving the eyes across a text without reading every word. Both skimming and scanning are fast reading techniques that can help locate information when there is not time to read an entire text carefully.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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READING STRATEGIES

Skimming and scanning


What is skimming?

Skimming is a reading technique that can help you to:


read more quickly
decide if the text is interesting and whether you should read it in
more detail

Skimming is a fast reading technique. Use it to obtain the gist of a


piece of text (i.e. to quickly identify the main ideas in the text).
How is 'skimming' different from 'scanning'?

The term skimming is often confused with scanning. Remember:


Skimming is used, for example, to get the gist of a page of a
textbook to decide whether it is useful and should therefore be read
more slowly and in more detail.
Scanning is used to obtain specific information from a piece of text
and can be used, for example, to find a particular number in a
telephone directory.
Sometimes you can use both reading methods. After you have skimmed a piece of text to
decide whether the text is of interest, you may wish to use scanning techniques to locate
specific information.
How to skim:

Read the title, subtitles and subheadings to find out what the text is
about.
Look at the illustrations to give you further information about the
topic.
Read the first and last sentence of each paragraph.
Don't read every word or every sentence.
What is scanning?

Scanning is a fast reading technique. It's a way of reading to look for


specific information in a text.

Scanning can be used to read through the ads in a newspaper, or for


browsing TV schedules, timetables, lists, catalogues or web pages for
information. For these tasks you don't need to read or understand
every word.

Scanning is also useful when studying or looking to find specific


information from a book or article quickly as there is not always time
to read every word.
How to scan:

Don't try to read every word. Instead let your eyes move quickly
across the page until you find what you are looking for.
 Use clues on the page, such as headings and titles, to help you.
 If you are reading for study, start by thinking up or writing down
some questions that you want to answer. Doing this can focus
your mind and help you find the facts or information that you
need more easily.

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