Reading
What
and why?
Similar
to LISTENING, SPEAKING
and WRITING, there
are two main roles for reading in language learning. The first is
as a goal of learning: 'the skill of reading'. The second
is as a means of learning: as a way of developing the students'
language proficiency and educational depth. Secondary-aged students
need to develop the skill of reading in English. It is through reading
that they will most likely come into contact with English, particularly
if they go on to higher education or are employed in international
work of some kind. But reading as a means of learning is
also important. Reading can support their language learning by contextualising
and extending vocabulary, creating mental images of correct spellings,
providing models for writing, and developing a 'feel' for and MEMORY
of English.
Current
theories suggest that reading is a 'psycholinguistic guessing game'
in which readers constantly try to predict what is coming next in
a text. While reading, readers constantly draw on what they already
know about the world and the topic of the text - that is, their
'schema', to help them bring meaning to the text. This 'top
down' approach to reading (as it is known) suggests that meaning
is not simply 'in' a text - it is built up by the reader.
Reading
in a second language, however, may not so easily fit into this pattern
because the necessary background information and familiarity with
the language may be missing - that is, the reader might not have
an appropriate schema available. Second language readers, for example,
may stumble on cultural references (such as place names or social
customs) which first language readers take for granted. They may
also have greater difficulty in deciding what they can ignore. One
reason why students sometimes fail to understand a text even when
they know all the vocabulary is because they cannot link what they
are reading to something they already know.

Practical
ideas
- Texts
can also be exploited in a number of different ways:
- Many
of the texts can be used to practise re-organisation of material.
For example, texts which have facts and figures can be transformed
into charts or graphs; texts which report an event can be
transformed into a dialogue or ROLE
PLAY; texts which narrate an event as news can be written
as a story, letter, poem or song.
- The
texts can be used to develop note-taking skills. This helps
students focus on the key points of the text and to understand
better how a text may be structured.
- For
WRITING practice,
you can ask students to expand a text - they can add more
to the beginning, middle and end.
- For
VOCABULARY practice,
ask students to find the words in a text which 'go together'
in a lexical set. If they have a thesaurus they can then add
more words and record them in their LANGUAGE
RECORDS.
- Many
of the texts can be used to foster CRITICAL
LANGUAGE AWARENESS.
- You
can use the texts as a resource for discourse analysis. For
example, you can ask the students to link up with a coloured
pen all the references to the subject of the text. You might
also ask them to identify the main ideas and any examples
of each idea.
- You
can use the texts as a starting-point for DISCUSSIONS.
- Before
asking students to read a text, you can ask them to guess what
they can from the illustrations, headings and diagrams. You can
also use this as an opportunity to give the students any necessary
background cultural knowledge to help them establish a schema
for the text.
- Many
of the reading texts are also recorded on the Class Cassettes
so that students can listen to the texts before, while or after
they read. You can use these recordings in a variety of ways:
- You
can play part of the recording before they read the text,
but ask the students to close their eyes and try to visualise
the words they hear.
- You
can play the recording and ask the students to listen and
make notes as they listen or afterwards. You can then discuss
their notes with them before they read and check their ideas.
- You
can play the recording while students read and ask them to
underline or note down all the words which do not sound the
same as they are spelt (e.g. fight, countries, daughters,
meant, labour).
- You
can play the recording and ask different groups of students
to listen for different things - for example, names of people
and places, numbers and adjectives. They can then share their
ideas to reconstruct the text before they read it.
- You
can record the text yourself but make some information different
or leave some information out. Students can read and find
the differences.
- Students
may not read very much in their mother tongue, so you may need
to start by encouraging reading generally. You can do this by
asking, perhaps at the start of every lesson, what they have read
since the last lesson. This can be anything - a newspaper headline,
a story, an advert, in the mother tongue or in English. Gradually,
you can suggest that they look for things to read in English which
they can tell the class about. In this way, the students can begin
to see reading as something of value to share.
- As
far as possible, try to create opportunities for students to read
a wide range of material of their choice in English. This may
vary from a library of graded readers to magazine articles chosen
from boxes, comics and magazines and reference books such as encyclopaedias
and textbooks in English. (Some students, for example, might enjoy
reading a Maths textbook in English.) Invite (rather than require)
them to tell other students (perhaps in small groups) what they
have read. They don't need to report back on everything they read.
The PARCEL
OF ENGLISH scheme is a good way of exchanging a range of English
language texts.
- You
can allow time for silent reading in class. Some students may
like to read if they finish an exercise early.
- Encourage
students to read other students' writing.
- Encourage
the students to guess the meaning of words they don't understand.
Also, stress that they don't need to understand every word in
order to read something.
- Show
the students how to use a dictionary so that they can read alone.
- One
common technique is to ask students to read aloud. In CEWw,
this technique is not recommended in the classroom. Reading aloud
is, in fact, a separate skill from reading for comprehension.
Students are unlikely to need this skill - unless they become
newsreaders! In the classroom, students typically make more
mistakes when they read aloud than they do normally (particularly
in PRONUNCIATION).
It also wastes time for the students who have to listen, and places
the teacher in the role of having to correct the reader all the
time. Also, since the emphasis is on production, the main skills
involved in reading - guessing words, working out meaning, predicting
- are not utilised. As an 'at home' activity, however, many students
may enjoy reading aloud. It can also help them to develop an image
of themselves as 'an English speaker'.

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