The document discusses the importance of reading skills within language acquisition, emphasizing that reading is the most vital skill for students. It explores types of readers, reading strategies like top-down and bottom-up processing, and the implications for teaching reading effectively. Additionally, it offers practical suggestions for classroom practices and developing reading skills through various techniques.
Reading Skills
Prepared by:Faraidoon H.amin
University of Kurdistan – Iran – Sanadaj
Faculty of Literature & Linguistics
MA Student in Applied Linguistics
2.
Reading Skill
SomeQuestions
Definition of Skill
Among the Four Skills Which One is the First One? Why?
Reasons for Reading
Changes in the Concept of Reading Skills
Types of Readers
What is Reading?
Types of Reading Skills
Schema Theory, What Does Schema Theory Mean?
Two Important Strategies Top-Down VS Bottom-Up
Implications What the Teachers Should Provide?
Classroom Practice and Procedure
Some ways for Developing Reading Skill:
Feedback To Learners
Conclusion
3.
Some Questions
1. Whatis reading?
2. What is skill?
3. Why do you/we read?
4. Who are readers?
5. How should we teach reading skill?
6. Among the four skills which one is the most vital one?
4.
Definition of Skill
Skill: ‘is an acquired ability to perform an activity well, usually one
that is made up of a number of co-ordinated processes’. Richards and
Schmidt.
In lg teaching, skills are often discussed in terms of fours different
modes, skills, and strands as following:
A. Reading
B. Listening
C. Speaking
D. Writing
5.
Among the FourSkills Which One is the
First One? Why?
Reading is clearly the most important lg skill since:
1.students have to read for their own specialist subject rather than speak lg.
2.Basic Internet Communication BIC continues to assume that reading skill as the
primary mode of communication.
3.From the lg acquisition point of view, reading can be a major source of
comprehensible input (Krashen,2004)Especially, in EFL contexts and countries
where English is used outside of country.
4.One of the things a student(s) is/are asked to do is to read.
5.Finally, it is easier to supply a written text to be read rather than a spoken one
to be understood.
6.
Reasons for Reading
Why do you read?
Williams(1994) classified the purpose of reading into:
1.Getting information from a text.
2.Getting specific information from a text.
3.For pleasure or for interest.
4.For criticizing
7.
Changes in theConcept of Reading Skills
Traditionally, the reader was seen as the ‘recipient’
of information or as an ‘empty vessel’ who brought
nothing to the text. This notion of ‘text as object’ (figure
6.1) is now frequently discredited in reading circles as
readers are not entirely passive. This ‘text as object’
viewpoint regards the reader as having nothing to
contribute to the reading process as such; the writer
provides information for the reader who is seen as an
‘empty vessel’ that merely receives information.
In recent years, however, an increasing number of
ELT materials that profess(shows and claims to develop
reading skills have moved from the ‘text as object’
viewpoint to that of the ‘text as process’, by encouraging
close interaction between the reader and the text (figure
6.2).
8.
Types of Readers
Two Types of Readers:
Efficient Readers/Active Readers: can access content more easily by changing
reading speed according to text, they can select significant features of a text and
skim the rest, they can guess meaning from the text they think a head by
predicting outcomes, they use background knowledge to help them understand
the meaning, they are motivated to read the text as they see it as a challenge
and the text has a purpose, they can switch reading strategy according to the
type of text they are reading and so on. Ur (1996).
Inefficient Readers/Passive Readers: acknowledges the idiosyncratic(unusual
way in which a particular person behaves oddity and individualism) and
unpredictable nature of individual reading preference and styles, readers differ in
what they read, how well they read, and how much they depend on or care about
reading. The readers are most likely to be engaged in the texts are interesting to
them as individuals and relevant to their practical needs and wants. Esky (2005).
9.
What is Reading?
Reading:is a source of 1.learning and a source of 2.enjoyment. 3.It can be
a goal in its own right and 4.a way of reaching other goals. As a source of
learning, reading can establish previously learned vocabulary and grammar,
it can help learners learn new vocabulary and grammar, and through success
in language use it can encourage learners to learn more and continue with
their language study. As a goal in its own right, reading can be a source of
enjoyment and a way of gaining knowledge of the world. As learners gain
skill and fluency in reading, their enjoyment can increase.
10.
Types of ReadingSkills
Extensive reading: can essentially also be referred to as reading for
joy. This approach advocates reading as much material in your target
language. You will be exposed to the widest range of vocabulary and
grammatical structures. To make you a better language learner and
help you on the way to fluency.
Intensive reading: focuses a shorter text, doing exercises with it, and
learning it in detail. Helps language learners really understand
grammar and syntax. For example, EFL can read a short paragraph
and then answer questions about the text, order sentences, or find
specific words.
11.
Schema Theory?
What DoesSchema Theory Mean?
Schema Theory: “is the knowledge that we have about the world is organized into
interrelated patterns based on our previous knowledge and experience”. Bartlett,
(1992).
Schema Theory: “is hardly a theory, and there is a very little research which explores
actually a schema is and how it would work for reading comprehension”. Grabe (2002:
282).
He values schema as “a useful simplifying metaphor for the more notion of prior
knowledge”.
These ‘Schemata’ allow us to predict what may happen.
For example: efficient readers are able to relate their background knowledge of the
world and based on previous knowledge of the similar texts.
In this sense both ‘Formal Schema’ and ‘Content Schema’ seems useful too.
12.
Essential Features ofReading:
Bottom-Up VS Top-Down
Reader tries to decode each individual
letter encountered(meet) by matching
it to the minimal units of meaning in
the sound system(the phoneme) to
arrive at a meaning of the text.
The interaction process between the
reader and the text involves the reader
in activating knowledge of the world,
plus past experience, expectations
and intuitions, to arrive at a meaning
of the text.
In other words, the top-down process interacts with bottom-up
process in order to aid comprehension.
Top-Down
Figure 6.3. Top-down and Bottom-Up Text
Process of the Text.
Bottom-Up
13.
Two Important Strategies
Top-DownVS Bottom-Up
Efficient Readers will not just try to interpret (Decode) the
meaning of individual lexical items but will also have clear ideas
about the overall rhetorical organization of the text.
With the influence of ‘Schema Theory’, ‘Top’ has come to mean
not only linguistics elements such as discourse but also conceptual
elements such as associated background knowledge in our memory.
14.
Implications
What the TeachersShould Provide?
Purpose of reading by supplying materials that stimulate(to motivate),
interest and do not have an overfamiliar content.
In reading the notion of privacy relates to learner needs: a learner may need
material of different topic and level, (individualized reading).
To be able to assess the difficulty of the materials to learners topic, length,
complexity, unfamiliar words/expressions, and overlapping the learners.
Timed activities or Speed reading: by encouraging students to read quickly.
Individual student and/or teacher can keep a record of how long it takes to
extract information from a given source.
15.
Classroom Practice andProcedure
Eskey,(2005) argues:
“People learn to read, and to read better, by reading”.
He says, “The reading teacher’s job is . . . not so much to be teach
a specific skill or content as to get students reading and to keep
them reading – that is, to find a way to motivate them to read, and
to facilitate their reading”.
16.
Classroom Practice andProcedure
R. V. White (1981) makes some suggestions
Stage1: Arouse the students’ interest and motivation by linking the topic of
the text to their own experience or existing knowledge.
Stage2: Give them points to search for in the reading text, or ask the students
to suggest the points.
Stage3: After reading, encourage a discussion the answers.
Stage4: Develop into writing by using the information gained for another
purpose.
17.
Classroom Practice andProcedure
Nunan; considers five essential steps:
1.Decide the overall purpose of the reading course.
2.Identify the types of texts and tasks that the course requires.
3.Identify the linguistic elements to be covered (consider what is going to
be important: grammatical items/lexis/discourse/specific purpose etc.).
4.Integrate texts and tasks into class-based work units.
5.Link reading to other language skills.
18.
Some Ways forDeveloping Reading Skill:
1.Skimming/Scanning; enable the learner to select specific and redundant information.
2.Gives a learner reason for reading.
3.Materials for reading obtain ‘Text Scrambling’ activities. The students should taught o have
‘Awareness’.
4. Some reading materials are constructed along the lines that the learners bring not only
background knowledge to reading but emotional (affective) responses as well, and will want to
talk about their reactions to various texts.
5. Learners proficiency, ask the learners to provide reading texts or to research their own
material for discussion in class. particularly in an EAP (English for Academic Purposes) context.
6.Teachers need to think about choosing reading passages that provide learners with a way of
questioning and interacting with the text.
19.
Feedback To Learners
Questions to learners can be either written or spoken
form and it is generally thought that a balance of the two
is appropriate for most learning situations.
The form of the questions should be:
Yes/No
True/False
Multiple Choice
Non-Verbal Matrix
Open-Ended.
20.
Nuttall, Identifies FiveBasic Question
Types Used for Reading
1.Iiteral comprehension.
2.Recoganizing or putting the information in the text into a
different order.
3.Come questions of inferring ‘reading between lines’.
4.Question types requiring a measure of personal response.
5.Question is quite sophisticated and not all students need it.
21.
Conclusion
Reading isthe most important skill among the four skills.
Reading helps us to improve communication.
Provide students with some reasons, aims, and purpose.
Motivate and encourage our students to read.
Active readers bring background knowledge to the text.
Pay attention to readers’ level, age, needs.
Focus on the features of the text short, complexity, and length.
Two ways of reading : Extensive and Intensive
The top-down process interacts with bottom-up process in order to aid comprehension.