TRiO Projects Active Textbook Reading http://www.clker.com/clipart-person-reading-book.html Lake Washington Institute of Technology Project Years 2010-2015 Achieving Excellence Together Table of Contents Active Reading 2 SQ3R – Improving Reading Comprehension 3 Highlighting 4 Textbook Note Taking 5 Learning Styles 6 The enclosed materials were compiled through grants from the U.S. Department of Education. However, the contents have not been reviewed by the Department and no endorsement should be inferred. The Lake Washington Institute of Technology Student Support Services TRiO Projects are100% federally funded annually at $444,064 1 Active Reading Did you ever fall asleep while playing a game or when watching your favorite movie? Probably not. How about when you read a textbook? Probably so. What is the difference? Active involvement, physically or mentally, in an activity causes a person to stay interested and committed. When you become passive, however, you rapidly lose interest and your thoughts drift away. In order to learn and retain information effectively from your textbooks, you must be an active participant in the process, rather than passively hoping you’ll remember what you read. Preview the chapter and create questions to answer while you read Break the chapter into easy to read sections Read each section actively, looking for answers to your questions Think about what you read, write down key points that stood out to you Connect new material to your own experiences and prior learning Test yourself over what you read to check for understanding of concepts Review your reading daily and weekly to retain the most important information Adapted from Rio Salado College © 2012 Preview & Question Test Yourself & Review Think About & Connect Break Down Read Actively 2 SQ3R – Improving Reading Comprehension The SQ3R method helps you to actively study textbooks and readings in order to retain the concepts of the material. With this method, you can also set realistic study sessions – keep sessions brief (15-20 minutes) and free from outside distractions. Repeat steps 1-4 until you complete the chapter. Save the REVIEW step until you are done reading. SURVEY Quickly examine the major headings in a chapter. These can give you an idea of the general structure and content. Read the introduction, summary and review questions (if available). QUESTION Take what you learn from the chapter headings to create questions that you will answer while you read. Keep the questions general, covering main ideas and important points. READ Divide the material into easy to read sections (usually based on the section headings in each chapter). Read the material section by section and look for answers to your questions. Pay attention to charts, graphs, tables, and pictures. Make sure you understand what you read before moving on to the next step. RECORD Go back through the section you just read and take notes or highlight key points and main ideas. Taking notes and highlighting after you read will keep you focused on the most important information so you don’t end up highlighting too much. Generally, the most important information is in the first and last sentence of a paragraph. REVIEW After finishing the entire chapter, scan over the reading and review the information aloud or in your head. Try to identify overall themes and relationships among concepts. Adapted from WWU Tutorial Center and LWIT TRiO Projects Study Skills Program 3 Highlighting Highlighting can be very beneficial to students, especially those who are visual learners. However, many times students highlight too much, or they are ineffective when it comes to highlighting. How to highlight Read first and then highlight – only after reading can you decide what’s really important Review headings, charts, pictures, diagrams, and bold words – Headings show what the most important topics are in a particular section. Use the headings to form questions that you expect to be answered in the section After reading a section, go back and highlight the main ideas – usually these are the answers to the questions you formed Identify and highlight important facts that explain or support the main idea Highlight key words or phrases – don’t highlight complete sentences Only highlight 1-2 sentences per paragraph (about 10% of the page) Summarize key points – take notes in a separate notebook or write in the margins. Highlighting by itself is often not sufficient Review highlighted information within 24 hours to aide in retention NO YES blog.sharpie.com blog.bokcenter.harvard.edu 4 Textbook Note Taking Many students can’t rely on highlighting as the only method for reviewing key points and concepts. Taking notes on the most important information, key points, and concepts is a must for most students. * Remember to only take notes AFTER you read a section Marginal Notes – write key points and concepts in the margin. Use your own words. Binder Notes – write important concepts and main ideas into a separate notebook. Use your own words. Notes can be linear (ex. free form, outline) or visual (ex. concept mapping, flow chart). Review – within 24 hours of completing your reading, go back over your notes. Reviewing on a daily and weekly basis transfers information to your long term memory. vismap.blogspot.com 5 courses.csail.mit .edu Learning Styles Visual learners like to study information using charts, pictures, diagrams, flow charts, and any other visual aide to help them learn new concepts. Using color coding and highlighters is helpful. Charts, Pictures, Diagrams, Flow Charts, Colors, Highlighters Aural learners study by listening to new information and reciting it out loud to themselves or others. Aural learners will benefit by reading their textbooks aloud to themselves. Hearing, Reciting, Audio Textbooks, Explaining to Others Read/Write learners study by reading their textbooks and re-writing information over again. They prefer lists and outlines. They will benefit from taking detailed notes on their readings. Take Notes, Outline, List, Review Notes/Chapter Summary Kinesthetic learners like to study by doing, experimenting, and repeating. Many kinesthetic learners move constantly while studying. Music, movement, or repetition work really well. Moving, Music, Repetition, Use All 5 Senses 6