Chapter 8 – Reading Skills

Reading Strategies & Stories

Keli Yerian; Cameron Keaton; and Bibi Halima

In this section, we’ll look at some specific strategies that relate to the research-supported principles for reading that were discussed in the previous sections. These strategies are concrete actions that you can take advantage of in your learning journey. As with the skills strategies in the previous two chapters, the strategies below have been drawn from multiple sources. Some were crowd-sourced by students in our LING 144 Learning How to Learn Languages class after they reflected on their own language learning experiences.

This chapter does not yet have student stories included in it. We will invite future cohorts to add more strategies and create more stories to illustrate them.

Metacognitive strategies for reading

Think about why you are reading
Think about what you are reading
Make a plan to read
Take advantage of your language class 

Socio-Affective strategies for reading

Find a cozy place to read… or read on the go
Enjoy a tea, coffee, snack or whatever you like while you read
Talk about what you’re reading
Play online multiplayer games
Read things you enjoy

Strategies for interpretive reading

Use your prior experience and knowledge (schemata)
Predict what will come next
Read titles and headings first
Use visuals to help you understand
Use context clues in the text to help you understand
Use grammatical information and word forms to help you understand
Reread important parts at least one more time
Use dictionaries and translation tools (wisely)
Read and/or watch out loud
Ask artificial intelligence to create texts for you
Ask artificial intelligence to summarize or analyze texts for you
Use artificial intelligence to analyze the language choices in a text
Skim the text for the main ideas
Scan the text for what you need
Highlight linguistic elements that you want to notice explicitly
Build strong associations between the sounds of a language and graphemes 

Strategies for interpersonal reading

Maintain a high tolerance for ambiguity
Ask clarifying questions
Incorporate what they write into what you write 
Take advantage of visuals like emojis
Change the purpose of your reading for different texts 

Can you think of any other reading strategies that we could add to any of the lists above?

 


References

Brown, H.D. & Lee, H. (2015). Teaching by principles: An integrative approach to language pedagogy (4th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc.

Paige, R. M., Cohen, A. D., Kappler, B., Chi, J. C., & Lassegard, J. P. (2006). Maximizing study abroad: A students’ guide to strategies for language and culture learning and use (2nd ed.). Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition, University of Minnesota.

Rawlings, A. (2018, December 11). Why emoji mean different things in different cultures. BBC. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20181211-why-emoji-mean-different-things-in-different-cultures

definition

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Learning How to Learn Languages Copyright © 2024 by Keli Yerian; Bibi Halima; Faith Adler; Logan Fisher; Cameron Keaton; Addy Orsi; and Abhay Pawar is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book