Skimming
and scanning
What
and why?
Skimming
and scanning are two different READING
skills. Skimming means looking at a text or chapter quickly in order
to have a general idea of the contents. Scanning means looking at
a text to find some particular information. For example, we skim
through a report to have a rough idea of what it says but we scan
a page of the telephone directory to find a particular name or number.
Skimming requires a greater degree of reading and word recognition
skills as it involves a more thorough understanding of the text.
Scanning to find a particular piece of information can be achieved
successfully by relatively poor readers and is therefore a very
satisfying achievement for those daunted by texts in a foreign language.
As the students become more confident of their reading ability in
the mother tongue and in English, they will learn how to approach
texts with different reading skills depending on the purpose of
the text and the purpose they have for reading it. The more students
are encouraged to approach a text by first using skimming or scanning
techniques, the sooner they begin to realise that they do not have
to read and understand every word of a text. Slow readers are 'text-bounded',
that is, they think that they have to work laboriously through every
word in order to understand a text.
Practical
ideas
-
Both skimming and scanning are practised in many exercises in
the Topic and Language Units.
- Use
scanning techniques at the beginning of the year to familiarise
students with the Student's Book. The task can be a race between
four teams in the class. For example, with CEWw 1 you could
ask them to turn to the Wordlist/Index and to find the
word which is after 'airport'. The first person to find it gets
a point for the team. Then ask them to find a word which is above
'film', then three below another word and on the same line in
another column. Then ask them to look at the map at the beginning
of the book and to find a Unit about 'Poems', for example, or
other titles of Themes or Units.
- It
is useful to explain the difference between skimming and scanning
to the students (give them the example of a telephone directory
and a chapter of a History/Science textbook).
- Before
the students read a text, ask them whether they think the task
requires them to skim or to scan the text.
- Students
often like having races. Occasionally ask students to see who
can find the information in a text first.
- Allow
time for students to read the texts quietly to themselves in class
to practise their own technique. Texts do not need to be read
out loud round the class.
- Encourage
students to practise skimming and scanning when they read in their
mother tongue.
- Students
can write 'skim' and 'scan' questions for other students at the
beginning of each Theme or Topic and Language Unit.

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