Term
Reading Comprehension Strategies |
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Definition
Are “conscious and flexible plans that readers apply and adopt to a variety of texts and tasks.” |
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Term
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Definition
When readers purposely bring to consciousness what they already know relating that knowledge to the text, they put a set of schemata into place, establishing a framework for the new information they will encounter. |
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Term
Asking and Answering Questions |
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Definition
When the reader poses questions prior to reading a selection or as he is reading the selection and then attempts to answer the questions while reading, he virtually guarantees that reading will be an active process. |
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Term
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Definition
Readers can infer meanings by using information from the text and their existing knowledge of the world to fill in bits of information that are not explicitly stated in the text. |
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Term
Determining What Is Important |
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Definition
Using this strategy requires that readers understand what they have read and make judgments about what is and is not important. |
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Term
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Definition
Requires students to first determine what is important and then condense it in their own words. |
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Term
Dealing with Graphic Information |
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Definition
Readers can often improve comprehension by giving conscious attention to the visual information supplied by the author. |
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Term
Imaging and Creating Graphic Representations |
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Definition
Some readers can improve their comprehension by creating visual representations of text, either in their minds or on paper. One kind of image occurs when readers visualize people, events, and places, usually with narrative material. Another kind of imaging consists of visually organizing key ideas in a text to graphically display their relationship, used most frequently with expository text. |
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Term
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Definition
They understand themselves as readers, the reading tasks they face, and the strategies they can employ in completing these tasks. |
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Term
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Definition
Is a procedure in which students and a teacher work together to improve students’ understanding of complex informational texts and at the same time improve students’ general ability to monitor their comprehension and learn from such texts. |
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