Pre reading stage
Pre-Reading Strategies: Setting the Stage for Successful Reading
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by Model Teaching | December 13, 2018.
What is done before a student begins to read a new text is critical to their reading and comprehension success. This article will describe important pre-reading strategies you can use in your classroom to ensure the success of your readers. In reading this article, you will learn how you can you ensure that your students get the most out of their independent reading time. Set the stage for success with practical pre-reading strategies you and your students can implement right away!
Some students just naturally love to read, and they read everything they can get their hands on. No one has to encourage them, or prompt them, they just read for the pure enjoyment of reading. These readers are also usually able to truly comprehend what they read, and can engage in thoughtful and intelligent conversations about what they’ve read. But what about those students who aren’t naturally drawn to reading? What about those students who struggle with decoding words, so much so, that their comprehension breaks down, and they quit in frustration? There are strategies you can implement as a teacher or tutor before a student is sent off to read on their own, and these strategies will set the foundation for a more successful reading experience.
Strong readers often intuitively do three things before reading a book:
- They glance through it to see if it looks appealing to them. Or if it is required reading for work or school, they still often flip through it to get a general idea of the length and layout.
- They think about why they would read it. Is it just for pure enjoyment? Do they have to read it to learn specific content? Are they reading it to learn about someone’s opinion of something?
- They wonder about how the book will end, particularly in fiction books. They might even make a guess as to what will happen!
If we can teach our struggling readers to do these three things, they will most likely be better prepared to tackle the decoding of words in the text. Consider the three steps above as the “Three Ps”: previewing the text, setting a purpose for reading, and making predictions. We will discuss each one in greater detail in this article, and you can also use our Three Ps Planning checklist as a tool for yourself (if teaching pre-K through first grade) or offer it to your students (grades 2 and up). These strategies can be taught in guided reading groups with struggling readers, in one-on-one reading conferences, or even as a whole class lesson. The goal is for students to eventually make a habit of these practices, so that they become a natural part of their reading life.
Step One: Previewing the Text
For our youngest readers, from pre-kindergarten through first grade, previewing the text often begins with looking at the cover of the book.
Share with students, or have them point out to you, the title, author and illustrator. This is an opportunity to make connections as well. For example: “The author is Kevin Henkes. What other books have we read by Kevin Henkes?” Next, you will take a picture walk. Slowly flip through the book with your students and have them notice aloud of what they see in the pictures. This is a perfect time to activate their prior knowledge or make personal connections. Have them consider what they already know, or experiences in their life, which might help them understand this book. For example, when previewing The Night Before Kindergarten, you can encourage your students to share how they felt the night before they started school. You might point out similarities and differences between their school and the school shown in the book. Building connections is a great way to get a reader engaged and excited to read the story.
For students in grades two and up, previewing the text may look slightly different. You will still begin by discussing the title, author and illustrator, but then you can discuss with your student what genre they believe this book belongs to. Next, the picture walk may not be necessary unless it is a picture book. However, you should still flip through the book, and if it is a non-fiction text book, this is an important opportunity to discuss non-fiction text features. You will want to examine the table of contents to start thinking about what will be covered in the text. As you flip through the rest of the book, point out features like chapter titles and section headings that give clues to the reader about what they should be prepared to learn. Depending on the level of academic vocabulary, it may also be a good idea to pre-teach any new terms they will come across in their reading. You can also point out that bold words or key words can often be found in a glossary for a definition, and take the time to look in the glossary for an example. Also, take time to focus on other features such as maps and tables and ask the student why the author would have included them. Non-fiction text features are there for a reason, so make sure your students understand that. Finally, just as with younger readers, you should activate your student’s prior knowledge by asking them what they already know that may help them read and understand this text.
Step Two: Setting a Purpose for Reading
Young readers will not fully understand an author’s purpose, but they can have a general understanding of whether or not they are reading a story just for enjoyment, or if the author might be trying to teach them a lesson. For non-fiction texts, they should understand that the author wants to share knowledge with them about a particular topic.
Older elementary students should have a knowledge of the three main purposes for writing: to entertain, to inform, or to persuade. Talk to your readers about whether or not the author wrote the book for fun, and just for a reader’s enjoyment, or if they wrote it to teach the reader about something. Or perhaps it is a piece of persuasive writing. Ask the student to explain what the author is trying to persuade the reader to do or to believe. It is always helpful to know why you are reading a particular text.
Step Three: Making Predictions
At the very earliest stages of reading, students will first make predictions based on the pictures. This is typically done after looking at the cover, and then again during the picture walk.
For older readers of narratives, you can ask them to predict how they think the story will end. You can also discuss characters and how they might change over the course of the book. For non-fiction texts, your students can predict what kinds of information they will learn about the main topic. If they have done a good job examining text features as they previewed the book, they should be able to back up their predictions with text evidence from those non-fiction text features. For example, a student might volunteer, “I think we will learn about polar bear skin and how it keeps them warm, because I saw a diagram that showed layers of blubber and fur. ”
As with any new strategy we implement, we have to be flexible with “The Three Ps” and base our decisions on the needs of our students. There may be times when you need to change up the order of the steps, or you might choose to omit a particular part. The most important idea to take away from this, is that by teaching your students these strategies, they will eventually be able to take ownership of their pre-reading work. This will set the stage for their independent reading success!
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Three P’s Planning Tool
This graphic organizer can be used by teachers as a checklist of reminders for how to Preview the Text, Set a Purpose for Reading, and Make Predictions. It could also be completed by students as they prepare to read a new text.
IMPLEMENTATION GOAL
Use the Three Ps Planning Tool as a checklist while you plan for a guided reading group or class lesson. You may wish to give older students their own copy to keep in their reading notebooks, or even a laminated copy they can reuse with a dry-erase marker for each new book they read. When you see students using these strategies naturally on their own, you will know your lessons were a success, and that your students are better equipped as readers.
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Page load link15 Examples of Pre-Reading Activities
Today you are going to learn about 15 pre-reading activities that you can use to start your reading lessons on the right foot.
When reading is taught, teachers usually follow a framework to teach a lesson, that framework has three stages:
The Pre-reading stage |
The While-Reading stage |
The Post-Reading Stage |
The Warm-up and the 3 stages made up what is known as the Stages of a Reading Lesson.
The Pre-Reading section consists of activities and exercises to prepare students before they do the actual reading
Let’s Learn some about why and how these activities contribute to the process of reading
Table of Contents
- 1 Why are Pre-Reading Activities Important?
- 2 Pre-Reading Activities for the Classroom
- 2.1 Pre-Reading Task #1: Discussion
- 2.2 Pre-Reading Task #2: I’m listening to You
- 2.3 Pre-Reading Task #3: Quotes
- 2.4 Pre-Reading Task #4: Guessing from Words
- 2.5 Pre-Reading Task #5: Guessing from Pictures
- 2.6 Pre-Reading Task #6: Pictionary
- 2.7 Pre-Reading Task #7: Guessing from sentences
- 2.8 Pre-Reading Task #8: How many words do you know?
- 2.9 Pre-Reading Task #9: Speed chatting
- 2.10 Pre-Reading Task #10: Videos
- 2.11 Pre-Reading Task #11: Brainstorming
- 2.12 Pre-Reading Task #12:True or False
- 2.13 Pre-Reading Task #13: Introducing Vocabulary
- 2. 14 Pre-Reading Task #14: KWL Charts
- 2.15 Pre-Reading Task #15: Debate
- 2.16 Pre-Reading Task #16: Pronunciation Tasks
- 3 More Teaching English Articles
Why are Pre-Reading Activities Important?
Pre-reading activities play an important role in a reading lesson.
Every reading lesson should start with activities to activate background knowledge and a series of activities to prepare students for the reading.
Pre-reading activities help students prepare for the reading activity by activating the relevant schemata and motivating them to read.
Pre-reading activities can also help learners anticipate the topic, vocabulary, and possibly important grammar structures in the texts.
Not doing pre-reading tasks will lead to students:
- Getting frustrated about know vocabulary
- Completing for no other reason than completing classwork
You have a lot to gain by teaching reading how it has been proven to work.
Pre-Reading Activities for the Classroom
There are many pre-reading activities that you can do in the classroom. More than we can even think of
Creativity leads to the creation of more activities to suit the needs and interests of a diverse community.
Here are some pre-reading activities that you can implement or modify to meet your student’s needs.
Pre-Reading Task #1: Discussion
The first pre-reading activity is about creating a discussion about the topic.
The Teacher prepares 4 sentences expressing opinions about the topic, then sticks them in the 4 corners of the classroom.
Students go and stand near the opinion they disagree with the most.
The groups explain why the disagree with the opinion.
Then students stand near the opinion they agree with the most and have a short discussion about it.
Pre-Reading Task #2: I’m listening to You
The second pre-listening task can help teachers promote oral interaction in the class.
This activity is called: “I am Listening to You”
This activity requires students to work in pairs. One of them talks while his or her partner listens for 1 minute about a topic.
Repeat with a new topic, students change roles and they can change partners after they have spoken and listened to each other.
Pre-Reading Task #3: Quotes
The third activity requires the use of quotes, you can choose quotes from great books or films
Good Reads, a very popular site for readers has a good list of quotes that you can choose from.
Find a quotation about the topic that you are going to cover and tell students to make groups of three and discuss the quotes you chose.
Students think about and answer questions like these:
- What does it mean?
- Do they agree with it? Why/Why not?
Note: Students can even bring their own quotes to the classroom
Pre-Reading Task #4: Guessing from Words
Before students look at the text they are going to read, the teacher writes 5 or 6 words from the text on the board and asks the students to guess the topic.
Students brainstorm ideas that could be written on the whiteboard for everyone to see and remember.
Additionally, the teacher can take a poll to see if students like ideas brainstormed by other students.
Finally, the teacher confirms how close or far they were.
Pre-Reading Task #5: Guessing from Pictures
The teacher finds 3 pictures or objects which are connected to the story or reading.
The teacher asks how those pictures and images are connected.
Finally, students read the text and check if they were right or wrong about the story connections they made.
Pre-Reading Task #6: Pictionary
Select some of the key words from the text.
Divide the class into two or three groups.
A learner from each group (at the same time) comes to the whiteboard.
They are told the word and they have to draw that word. They are not allowed to use letters or numbers in their drawing.
The other students try to guess what the word is and thus earn points for their team.
Pre-Reading Task #7: Guessing from sentences
The teacher dictates 3 sentences from the reading passage. Students write them down and check with a friend if they are correct.
The sentences are written on the board if necessary as a final check.
Then the teacher asks how these sentences might be connected.
Students predict and then read the text quickly to check their predictions.
Pre-Reading Task #8: How many words do you know?
The teacher prepares the board by writing the letters of the alphabet in 3 or 4 columns.
The students form two lines standing behind each other.
Use 2 colored markers so you know which team wrote what. The first student at the front of each team gets the board marker.
The teacher introduces a topic to the class.
The 2 students move to the board and write one word related to the topic on the board next to the letter it begins with, then pass the marker to the next student in their team and go to the back of the queue.
The 2 teams compete to write as many words as possible on the board in 3 minutes.
The team with the largest number of appropriate and correctly spelled answers wins!
Pre-Reading Task #9: Speed chatting
Prepare one or two simple questions related to the topic of the reading.
Ask the class to make two rows facing each other.
Then, encourage your learners to ask each other questions about the topic, but warn them that they only have 60 seconds to do so.
Once the 60 seconds are up, one of the rows rotates so each learner has a new partner.
Repeat the process several times.
Pre-Reading Task #10: Videos
There is so much good free content available these days. First, find a short video relating to the topic of the reading.
I would suggest something around three minutes long.
After watching the video yourself, prepare some simple discussion questions.
Play the video and then ask the students to talk with a partner about what they watched.
Pre-Reading Task #11: Brainstorming
The teacher gives the title of the reading to the learners and students have to share all their knowledge about the topic.
The goal of this activity is to help learners create expectations about what they are about to read and then see if their expectations were met.
For example,
If you have to teach about the influence of social media on teenagers, students can take turns and talk about the topic,
When they read the passage, they confirm their expectations.
Pre-Reading Task #12:True or False
Let’s take the example of the influence of social media on teenagers again.
You can come to the classroom and read a few statements and ask them if they think those statements are true or false.
Don’t reveal the answers.
Let them confirm if they were right or wrong when they are reading the text.
Pre-Reading Task #13: Introducing Vocabulary
In the context of an ESL Classroom, it will always be important to introduce key vocabulary so students don’t get discouraged by unknown words while they read.
Introducing vocabulary doesn’t have to be a boring task.
You can easily create a wordle with key vocabulary and see if students can tell you something about those words.
Another tool that can help you provide and study vocabulary is Wordwall.
Pre-Reading Task #14: KWL Charts
Have you ever used KWL Charts in the classrooms?
KWL Charts are simple.
Just have students write everything they know about the topic (K column) and everything they want to know (W column) and what they learned after the reading (L Column)
Pre-Reading Task #15: Debate
Prepare some controversial quotes related to the topic they are about to read.
Show the quotes to the learners and ask students to comment on them.
Ask how students feel about them.
Ask the class to comment on opposite views held by other learners.
Pre-Reading Task #16: Pronunciation Tasks
Another way to introduce vocabulary is to give students some words transcribed phonetically.
You can take the phonetic transcriptions from the Cambridge Online Dictionary.
You can use several online tools to show the phonetic transcriptions to your learners.
I use Wordwall (Random cards), alternatively, you can use Quizlet.
Students make groups of 3 and analyze what those words are and how they are related to the topic.
More Teaching English Articles
Remember that the pre-reading stage is the first of three stages, you should learn what types of while-reading activities you can do in the classroom and also the most common types of after-reading strategies.
When you manage all of them, your reading lessons will succeed
These are some posts that you might be interested in:
- Presentation, Practice, and Production
- Teacher-centered Methodology
- Student- centered Methodology
- Stages for Teaching Listening
- 19 Types of Pre-Listening Activities
- 10 Types of Post-Listening Activities
- 12 Examples of While-Listening Activities
If you have questions about pre-reading tasks, you can message me via Facebook or Twitter
Reading phases, what are they? | Education and study
When we talk about reading, we can do so by referring to three different types of reading. The first is the instrument in which we have a book, a novel or a short story, in which reading is carried out mainly as a leisure activity in search of entertainment and fun. This reading is relaxed and calm because it's not about memorizing anything, but about having a good time. In the second type, we also mention the verb read to indicate the reading we give to the press, the label of any advertisement, propaganda, magazine, etc. In this reading, we aim to learn about something specific, to indicate the price of any product, or, for example, just read the specs of the latest iPhone on the market. And as the last option we will focus on in this article, we refer to reading as a learning process or methodology.
When we refer to the reading we are doing on a particular subject, it should be by differentiating its phases for a more complete study of the subject. This teaching methodology is one of the most commonly used in schools, institutes and universities as it is the most efficient when it comes to acquiring knowledge and providing students with meaningful learning about concepts and data that need to be memorized. That's why we highlight each of these steps below and very briefly summarize what each of them consists of.
Index
- 1 Stage 1: pre-reading
- 2 Stage 2: Critical reading of the text
- 3 Phase 3: Post-reading
Stage 1: pre-reading
Stage 1: pre-reading this mentally answer
questions that appear before reading the topic and just turning the pages : What will it be about? How many dates do you need to study? How many of these concepts will be most relevant? etc. This stage of reading is very well seen in elementary school textbooks. These are preliminary questions that the teacher asks his students simply by reading the title of the topic being discussed. What will you get out of it? Find out what the learner's prior knowledge of the subject matter he is going to learn later, and give a brief idea of what he is going to find in the subject he is starting.This stage differs from others in that its reading is fast, flexible and has no stops neither try to understand the text, nor write anything on the page or at the edge of what is read. We will simply read and choose individual words to get a brief idea of what we will consider next.
Stage 2: Critical reading of the text
After completing the pre-reading or phase 1, we will reread the text, but this time understanding what we are being told and stopping every few paragraphs to understand the research topic.
At this stage of reading we will do structural analysis of this and significant learning. If necessary and almost mandatory, we will use the underline tool to highlight the most important concepts. In this way, once this phase of reading is completed, we can immediately distinguish major concepts from others more minor, specific dates from others that are not so important, and literal definitions of simple comments that the author of a topic or book refers to a particular point.
This is the most important phase of reading because it is where we understand what we are reading, pay attention to what is being said to us, and focus all of our attention on the new learning we are learning. However, while this is the most important, we should not ignore the other two or start with this one. Careful!
Article subject:
Comprehensive reading: understand what you are reading
Phase 3: Post-Reading
After light reading as well as deeper and more critical reading, we will do the following: parse read . In this we will help each other with notes, annotations, diagrams and other tools to capture the most important things we have read. In this way, we will provide conditions , we will rearrange the ideas of and we will have a script that will help us to study everything that we have read and learned from the subject.
Help yourself at this stage by reading colored pencils, pens of different shades, etc. , to distinguish between the different types of data that we can find in the research topic: dates, important concepts, minor concepts, explanations, etc.
It goes without saying that each of the phases considered so far is important for a good teaching method, and that we should not skip any of them, as we have said before. Everything, in order, for the benefit of study and study. This type of learning to read is usually taught from an early age, in school. Otherwise, it is recommended to do this, because it will serve you not only in the current period of study, but also in later periods: institute, university, possible competitive exams, etc.
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Stages of the process of learning to read and types of reading in a foreign language
Bibliographic description:
Komarova, E. V. Stages of the process of teaching reading and types of reading in a foreign language / E. V. Komarova. - Text: direct // Young scientist. - 2015. - No. 4 (84). - S. 574-576. — URL: https://moluch.ru/archive/84/15779/ (date of access: 10/17/2022).
This article is devoted to the concept of reading and its stages in the process of teaching a foreign language. A brief description of the main types of reading is considered and given.
Key words: reading, learning process, semantization, translation, foreign language.
Reading is one of the types of speech activity. From a psychological point of view, the process of reading includes perceptual, mental and mnemonic activities. The purpose of reading is to extract and process the information contained in the text. As a result of processing information, understanding arises, therefore, reading should be considered as one of the types of communication. in fact, the essence of the process of obtaining information comes down to decoding the meaning laid down by the author in the text. Decoding includes comparison, analysis, synthesis, generalization, abstraction and a number of other mental operations that are part of the reading mechanisms.
Reading is a complex skill, a complex creative and cognitive activity of a person, in which highly developed skills of visual perception are in dialectical interaction with the processes of thinking, imagination, with the processes of the emotional-volitional sphere of the reader. Reading, perhaps more than any other kind of work on the language, is associated with the whole variety of language activities. As a result, when teaching a foreign language, the role and functions of reading change depending on the stage of learning a foreign language. [4, c.250]
Considering the process of reading in a foreign language, it should be said about the objectively existing stages of understanding what is being read and about some specific types of work for each stage on the formation of the ability to read and understand foreign texts, which by their nature begin to approach such types of work that reflect the needs of a mature reading and the real requirements for mastering this skill, presented by the program.
The ability to read and understand without resorting to translation into their native language is a complex form of language activity, to which the student approaches gradually, acquiring a number of other skills and overcoming a whole range of difficulties. [2, p.110]
The process of understanding a foreign text goes through several stages. If we proceed from the fact that a correct understanding of the parts can come from understanding the whole, then the first stage in understanding a foreign language text is understanding its general content without details, the understanding of which cannot be achieved with the initial acquaintance with it. In the process of initial acquaintance with the content of the text, analytical work of thought takes place, but analysis is carried out only insofar as it is necessary for the primary synthetic understanding of the content of the text, therefore, the first stage in understanding a foreign language text can be considered a synthetic-analytical understanding of its general meaning. At this stage, a quick reading of the text is used in order to get a general grasp of the meaning of the text. [3]
The next stage of understanding a foreign text is its analytical understanding, that is, understanding of individual words, grammatical forms and structures, which provides a fairly accurate understanding of what is being read. Those words and expressions that served as a support for understanding the general meaning at the synthetic-analytical level of understanding now serve as a support for text analysis. At this stage, repeated slow reading is used in order to carry out a detailed and in-depth analysis of the text, which results in a perfect understanding of its content. The text is subjected to lexico-grammatical analysis, since the analysis of lexical and grammatical means makes it possible to penetrate deeply into the content of the text. [4, c.252]
The third stage of understanding a foreign language text is synthetic understanding. In this case, a more perfect synthesis is produced than the one that characterizes the first stage, since it is based on an accurate understanding of the meaning of all used lexical and grammatical expressive means. Imagining not only the general content of the text, but also the meaning of each sentence, phraseological unit, grammatical construction, each individual word and form in general, students can be distracted from expressing thoughts in a foreign language, trying to convey the content of the text in their native language. The end result of such work is a good translation. However, as long as students cannot find adequate means of expressing the content of a foreign language text, they do not have a true understanding of it. It is necessary from the very beginning to develop in students the ability to perform an adequate translation, that is, to teach them to express the thought they understand of a foreign text in a good literary native language.
The fourth stage is reading without translation, that is, understanding the material being read without translation.
There is a widespread point of view according to which two types of reading are distinguished: proper reading, on the one hand, and educational reading, on the other hand. Within the framework of educational reading, preliminary reading and informative reading can be distinguished.
There are several classifications of types of reading: reading without translation, prepared and unprepared, class and home reading, reading with content difficulties previously removed and not removed, and so on. Consider one of the classifications, according to which there are three types of reading:
1. Study reading, which is divided into philological, critical, in-depth and abstract;
2. Introductory reading, which includes critical, abstract and abstract;
3. Viewing reading, which can be divided into abstract, review, indicative and search reading. [1, c.60]
In abstract reading, the attitudes of studying and introductory types are combined. According to some researchers, abstract reading precedes abstracting on a par with introductory and studying types of reading. A feature of its difference from the concise one is noted - the latter proceeds in a slower high-speed mode. In addition, abstract reading is more discontinuous than concise reading, as the reader focuses on the semantic aspects, the rest of the material is omitted. The result of abstract reading is an abstract composed of theses, that is, the main provisions of the text. If we consider the deductive approach to the text to be the main distinguishing feature of abstract reading, then we should focus on viewing reading and its elements of reading prior to abstracting.
Summary reading is aimed at understanding the logical-factual chain, understanding the author's intention, general assessment of what has been read and determining the suitability of the text.
Critical reading involves purposefully comparing one's own thoughts with ideas read from the text. It is based on complex mental operations, including, on the one hand, abstraction from non-existent moments, on the other hand, taking into account and interpreting numerous details. All this leads to penetration into the deep structure of the text and a comprehensive assessment of the author's positions.
Review reading is aimed at highlighting the idea of the text. If it is implicit, then review reading becomes impossible. The result of a review reading may be the preparation of an abstract of the text.
Indicative reading is aimed at finding information in the text that is of interest to the reader. If the output is negative, then the reading stops immediately.
Search reading is aimed at searching for certain data in the text. At the same time, the main difference between this type of reading and viewing is the presence of these data in the text, while in the second case, the reader simply evaluates and selects unfamiliar material. [5]
Philological reading is a subtype of reading aimed at expanding the vocabulary and memorizing the language form of the original.
Deep reading as a subspecies of studying reading is characterized by a special emphasis on revealing implicit information.
The main indicator of reading maturity is the ability of the reader to change the strategy in the process of reading, depending on the nature of the material and the reader's attitude towards it.