academic reading for tutors - qooqrrr

14
They don’t read do they? Ideas for a staff session on supporting student reading Drawing on LDHEN discussion (2011)

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Page 1: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

They don’t read do they?

Ideas for a staff session on supporting student readingDrawing on LDHEN discussion (2011)

Page 2: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

London Met – reading reading

Why students are not readingWhat’s it for – why do we want our students to read?Range of practical activities to encourage reading – thinking - writing

Page 3: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

Why some don’t read

Lack cultural capital Lack of academic capital Studying seen as part timeStudents read less than they didSheer amount of information…Shift to modularity – more reading expected of less inducted students with less timeSubjects seen as vocational rather than academicEffect of HE policy and practice

Page 4: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

What’s it for?

Why do you want your students to read?Quantity?The ability to find difficult sources? The discovery of obscure texts? Reading for meaning? Reading for critical engagement?http://www.publishinghub.net/

Page 5: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

What we can do

Make explicit what we mean by taken for granted practices

Independent learner

Reading list

Read around the subject

Read and make notes

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Student Activity

Brainstorm: Why do we read? How do we know what to read? How can we read effectively?How much should we read?

Discuss with group – acknowledge reading is difficult – but gets easier with practice

Page 7: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

Read in the curriculum

Embed opportunities for students to develop academic practices in the curriculum:Acknowledge time constraints: specify how many sources; photocopy…

Make space for reading and reading related activities:

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Model it!

Model reading yourself – breaking text into chunks – use of skim and scan & in depthDiscuss your reading – it can be difficult for everyone! Split students into pairs/groups – give a text to read in classTextmapping can help: http://www.textmapping.org/using.html

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Support it: make a meal of your reading

Teach the QOOQRRR active reading strategy:Q – Question: before reading, students need to ask: what do I know? What do I need? Then -O – Overview: the course handbook, AIMS and OUTCOMES show the what & why of readingO – Overview: what you are reading - intros/outros/first sentences. Then - Q – Question again: why am I reading this, now?R – read actively and interactively – marking textR – re-read annotations - make key word notesR – review your notes – set new goals

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Active, interactive & critical reading strategy

Student Activity – have a short reading session in class:

Tip: For EACH significant section: What is this paragraph about? Where is the writer coming from?Who would agree/disagree with this position? What is the argument? Who would dis/agree? What is the evidence? Is it valid? How do you know?Make annotations – marginalia - short notes.

TIP: index cards of all sources – re-cycle reading

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Link to writing:

Issues with reading and writing! Hence increase in plagiarism?Explain point of readingExplain writing = learningLink reading strategy to writing strategy‘The paragraph as dialogue’ …

Page 12: Academic reading for tutors - QOOQRRR

Writing questions:

These questions can shape & support writing:What is this paragraph about?What exactly is that? What is your argument? (Tell me more)What is the evidence (for & against)?What does it mean?How does this relate back to the question as a whole?

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Make reading necessary

Make it impossible not to read:Read this & come to seminar with:Three words that describe how it made you feelA bare bones summary (25 words)A visual summaryAn object that represents something from the text – to discussOne question that you would ask the authorA one minute presentation

Value the effort that is put in when it is.

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Emergency tactic:

When half of them have not read the set text:Get everyone to select one sentence from the text that they have found meaningful (a main point or an idea with which to argue). Get them to write this on a post-it or on the whiteboard and say why they chose it. The ones who did read should be able to make an informed choice – others have to busk it… An interesting discussion ensues!!Maybe they all read next time.