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Reading Goals-Activities Sheet for ENGL1201 |
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Goals (in boldface) are presented very roughly in the order useful for reading and/or teaching. That is, the first concept (reading as hypothesis creation) comes before a concept like summarizing. Notice that some goals have no strategies. Instructors are invited to share the successful activities and assignments they devise to accomplish these goals. Learn to read to create hypotheses and verify or modify them--that is, to learn to read for meaning1. Begin a homework assignment in class. Ask them to start reading (to
themselves). After a minute ask them to reflect on what they did. Some will have
noticed the title; some won't. Some will have read the bio; some won't. Some may
have skipped through the entire essay; some won't. Discuss what these choices
are about. Have them return to the text and read for another minute and repeat
the process. Recognize part and whole in an essay1. In class read an essay aloud and ask students where an essay's
introduction ends. It's useful to have them articulate their reasoning as a way
of discussing what the purpose of an introduction is. The same can be done after
a reading assignment regarding the conclusion. Summarize an essayAfter students have identified all the parts to an essay (less than ten; often more like five or six), have them write a summary in just two to three (often complex) sentences that take into account all the parts. In class have them evaluate their summaries both for inclusiveness (adequately complex representation of text) and elegance (students can really get into revising a summary for elegance). This writing prepares them for using summaries to contextualize their use of cited material in their own essays. Recognize key conceptsShow students a concept map that you have created, and discuss it with them, in advance of their reading an essay. See example of "mapping" Robert Scholes's essay on how to read a video text: Annotating the textHave students highlight key points, write summary phrases, challenge the author, identify words or sections that confuse, say what the text reminds them of. This is useful preparation for parts/whole work and for summarizing. It can prepare for the double-entry journal and playing the believing and doubting games. Responding to textsDouble-entry journals, summary-response writing, key-idea response, paired-essay response Understanding author's purposeHave them think about who the intended reader(s) might be as a way of approaching the author’s purpose and discuss how the author has constructed the essay in light of this purpose. Reading the relationship of the author to subject and audienceRecognizing assumptionsIdentifying all the perspectives represented in the essay--and the author's positionPlaying the believing and doubting game (Peter Elbow's idea)Reading as a writerHave students identify the aspects of an essay they like and say why. This list becomes part of an ongoing list of criteria + text reference that you and the class can use for essay evaluation. |
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