Process Summary
Before Reading: Tasks and
Strategies
Stage One
The reader's task prior to reading is to activate
his or her prior knowledge of the topic, to prepare the mind
to interact with the new information contained in the text.
Schema is another term for the prior knowledge base each reader
possesses about a topic. Schema
is a network of concepts, experiences, and associations that
students bring to their interactions with the printed page.
Rather than just "diving in cold"
and reading word by word with eyes tending to glaze over, skilled
readers, like skilled athletes, ready themselves for the task.
As an athlete prepares to exercise by doing warm-up exercises,
so does a reader "warm up" the
mind. Each textbook reading experience does not have
to be an arduous and frustrating exercise if students realize
that they possess some knowledge already and that this text
material will augment what they already know.
Tasks of the Before-Reading Stage
In the before-reading stage, the teacher can
use tasks and follow strategies to motivate students to engage
in the reading process. One way to motivate
students is to help them to activate their prior knowledge
of the topic (schema). In general, the teacher can help students
create a focus for their reading efforts, to set a purpose for
the reading.
Strategies to Activate Prior Knowledge
The teacher can do much in the classroom to
prepare students for their readings. Prior to class, the teacher
can anticipate student needs by:
Previewing the chapter and determining
which concepts are essential.
Reading over the material with an eye to student needs. How
much foundation building will the students need to understand
these concepts?
Asking "Where are the trouble spots in this chapter?"
Noting resources offered by the text, such as the glossary,
list of objectives, margin notations, and end-of-chapter summaries
and questions.
In-Class Strategies
In class the teacher can help to build a bridge
between information which is "known" and information
which is "new." To build a bridge between known and
new, the teacher can:
Review what has been learned
to date.
Ask "What do we already know?" For example, in a business
text's chapter on global business, recall that the previous
chapter dealt with "U.S. Business."
Ask questions to draw on students' life experiences: "Do
you know any companies that operate worldwide?"
"What problems do you think an American company might have
overseas?"
Use the table of contents of the text to put the new topic in
context.
Link new material to concept maps or webs of material learned
previously.
Reviewing known material brings to the surface
the knowledge that the students already possess; it establishes
a "platform" for the new information. Students get
the sense that they bring something to the task.
A second in-class strategy that the teacher
can encourage students to employ is to look
ahead, to survey a chapter or other reading. Looking
ahead is similar to looking at a road map before taking a trip;
it prepares the mind. To look ahead
Skim through the chapter or section.
Look at subheadings, pictures, and graphic representations to
get an idea of what is coming.
Anticipate. Encourage students to write down their predictions
of the concepts they will be learning and, afterwards, to compare
their predictions with what they actually encountered.
A third in-class strategy involves questioning:
What do we want to know from
this reading?
Take the chapter title and subheadings and turn them into questions,
to focus the mind and create a reading goal.
Forming questions or predictions about the upcoming
reading helps to create a focus for the student during the reading,
so the student doesn't just stare aimlessly at the words on
a page. Questions make the reading more active and purposeful.
As a fourth strategy, students can benefit
from the use of K-W-L Charts to
log their interactions with a reading (Vacca & Vacca, 1996,
pp. 211-217). A K-W-L Chart is a table on which students can
record their prior knowledge and new learning from their reading
experience. K-W-L stands for the following three questions:
K = What do I know
already about this topic?
W = What do I want to know?
L = What did I learn from this reading?
The first two questions are completed in the
before-reading stage. The third question is completed in the
after-reading stage.
A fifth in-class strategy helps students
to build vocabulary and new concepts:
Prior to a reading assignment,
introduce new concepts and vocabulary that the students will
encounter in the reading.
For more details on vocabulary-building ideas,
see the SEA Site module, Reading
and Writing in Content Areas.
Conclusion
Students need overt instruction and practice
in the before-reading tasks and strategies discussed above in
order for those tasks and strategies to become part of their
repertoire of study skills. It helps if the teacher can model
the process and then encourage students to work in groups to
practice. This "scaffolding" of strategy instruction
helps students internalize the skills, so they will develop
the ability to use them independently. Keep in mind that "to
control the process, readers must understand the process"
(Smith, 1995).
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