More About Effective Textbook Study
Plan. Prime your brain.
Establish a good environment. Place yourself in surroundings that help your
ability to concentrate and encourages good posture, and a ready-to-work
attitude.
Relax and set a positive mental attitude. Set yourself up to be successful. Do
your study-reading when you are at your mental best. Have confidence in
yourself; know that you can read successfully and accomplish the goals you set.
Review instructions. Check any comprehension guidelines you have been given such
as "read this in preparation for tomorrow's lecture," or "read to see how this
author differs from what I've said today," or "review all of the material we
covered in preparation for the exam."
Review any lecture notes. Reread any notes you have on this topic looking for
topics or ideas you need to clarify, words you need to define, or names and
dates you need to fill-in.
Set your purpose. Match the way you read to your purpose. For instance, reading
for enjoyment does not require the full understanding that reading to prepare
for a psychology lecture requires, and those demands are different from reading
for a chemistry exam. Clarify your purpose before you begin to read, and you're
more likely to be successful and less likely to waste time.
Preview the assignment. To preview, *read the chapter objectives, -read
headings/subheadings, -read introductory and concluding paragraphs, -read
boldface and italic words and phrases, -highlight/ clarify unfamiliar
vocabulary, -examine graphics, and -review end-of-chapter summaries and
questions. Take advantage of anything that will help you understand the
organization and core ideas.
Organize your thoughts. Based on the chapter objectives and headings/
subheadings, jot down the major topics you are going to be reading about. Then,
write a few words about what you know on each of the topics.
Clarify what you want to know when you finish reading. If you don't read to find
out something 'specific, you probably won't. One way to read for something
specific is to phrase the chapter's objectives or headings/subheading as
questions and then read to answer those questions.
Do. Be active. Think.
Restate ideas in your own words. At the end of a sentence or paragraph, rephrase
the idea in your own words.
Form mental pictures. Stop and build a mental picture of what the author is
saying.
Compare what you are reading to what you know. Ask how does new information fits
with what I know? Does it reinforce, contradict, or add new information?
Answer questions. Connect what you are reading to questions you need to answer.
If you don't understand what you are reading, use one of these fix-up strategies
to get back on track:
Define unfamiliar words. Understand the words the author uses. Check the
context, glossary, lecture notes, a dictionary or ask someone.
Use chapter objectives and headings/subheadings. Reread objectives and
headings/subheadings for the unclear passage for ideas or concepts that help you
to understand.
Review related graphics. Reread any graphic and its explanation to see if it
clarifies the text information.
Reread a portion. Try reading the sentence or paragraph again with the specific
goal of clarifying your question.
Keep the problem on hold and hope it will clarify itself. If the problem is just
one sentence or paragraph, you can mark it and continue reading. It's possible
the next sentence or paragraph will help you.
Compare information with notes or another source. Find and read about the topic
or idea in another book to see if a different approach helps your understanding.
Ask someone. When you've clarified the vocabulary; reread the objectives,
headings/subheadings, graphics, and unclear passages; reviewed other information
you have and you still don't understand what you need to, ask someone for help.
Review. For perspective & memory.
Reread thoughts you've organized and questions you've answered during reading.
Make use of the work you did during your planning and reading.
Answer questions. Write out or talk through the answers to the questions you set
out in your plan.
Consolidate and integrate information. Combine your knowledge, what you've
gained from reading and your lecture notes to form one coherent picture.
Participate in a study group. Join a group of classmates to talk about what you
have read. Try reviewing concepts with one another, sharing notes, and taking
practice tests.
Test yourself. Make up a test on the material or have a classmate make one up
and test yourself. Make a set of Question-Answer flash cards for a convenient
carry-along review tool by writing the question on one side of a 3x5 card and
the answer on the reverse side.
Continue the cycle
Occasionally, on small assignments or familiar material, you will achieve your
reading comprehension goals at the end of one plan >> do >> review cycle. On the
other hand, when you're reviewing; don't be surprised to discover gaps in your
knowledge. When you do, just develop a new plan that will help you fill in the
gaps. Reread the portion of the assignment you need to get the information and
then review, making sure to integrate the new information with what you already
have.
Reference:
(c) 1993 JL McGrath, Paradise Valley Community College
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