TEACHING TOOLS - UNIT 1 - READING
PROCEDURES
Methodological Recommendations
What teachers should do to help students learn reading strategies:
- Teachers should model the process aloud: report as they go through the different stages of the reading process.
- Teachers should use certain teaching techniques to facilitate reading: e.g. games: jump reading, pace reading, graphic organizers, jigsaw reading.
- Students need to read in class, and have enough time for discussing reading strategies with teacher and peers.
- Students should be encouraged to talk about strategies: mention the ones that can be used and those that they actually use.
- Teachers should promote the development of reading habits.
- Students should be able to identify the purpose of reading in order to choose the reading strategies they need to use.
- The best way to foster the sustained use of strategies is by planning pre-, while, and post reading activities. The less independent students are, the more important pre-reading activities become.
- Pre-reading: in order to prepare students for what they are going to read as a way to expose them to new vocabulary and see what the text is about
- While-reading: to help students understand the text.
- Post-reading: to connect their ideas/life with what they have read.
Pre-reading actions:
- Assess students' background knowledge of the topic
- Activate students background knowledge.
- Teach key vocabulary.
- Help students identify the purpose of reading
- Guide students to get the gist of the topic
Sample pre-reading activities:
- Have a look at the title, headlines, subheadings and paragraphs to predict what the text may be about.
- Pay attention to images(pictures, graphics, maps) that may add meaning to the text to activate background knowledge.
- Review and/or pre-teach key words whose meaning is critical to understanding.
- Brainstorm ideas connected to topic.
- Make associations
- Create questions about the topic
- Write before reading, then read to confirm.
While-reading activities
- Read instructions carefully
- Underline, highlight, circle unknown words.
- Use a dictionary.
- Organize information using semantic maps, graphic organizers
- Take notes
- Ask for clarification
- Try to answer questions asked before starting reading
- Reread, as many times as necessary.
- Order lines or paragraphs
- Insert headlines or lines
- Scan for some items of information
- Skim for general idea/global understanding (gist)
- Complete sentences
- Identifying cognates
- Answer questions.
- Decide true or false.
- Find the evidence.
- Find which concept is not mentioned.
- Find information that is not true
- Choose the correct image
Post-reading activities
- Discuss what was interesting
- Summarize the text
- Write a different ending
- Create a character poster