Title: Effective Learning Programme Reading Critically
1Effective LearningProgramme Reading
Critically
- Materials by Gill Burgess (slightly adapted)
2Critical Reading
3A critical reader
- attempts to understand and analyse the reasoning
in the text - evaluates the evidence offered
- recognises assumptions
- takes a challenging and questioning attitude
towards the text
4A critical reader doesnt
- accept the authority of the text without question
- take a passive and purely receptive role towards
the text - write off the text immediately if the writers
meaning is not immediately clear - quickly dismiss the text because the views do not
match his/her own
5To what extent do these everyday reading tasks
require a critical reading approach?
- reading the instructions to set the thermostat on
your heating boiler - reading a local newspaper report about an attack
on an Asian shopkeeper - reading a primary school prospectus for your
child - reading a course outline
- reading descriptions of 2 sofas in different
furniture catalogues - finding out the train times on a website
6Critical Reading
- So all texts, to a certain extent require
critical reading. It is not about criticising
everything you read but its about asking
questions about the text its purpose, the claims
made and the evidence presented.
7Some general questions to think about
- Can I believe everything I read?
- Are experts always right?
- What makes me take more notice of one academic
writer and less of another? - What makes a scholarly, rigorous piece of
research, and what makes research findings weak
or strong? - Â
-
8Some questions to think about when surveying a
text
- Who is the writer writing for?
- Who is the publisher?
- Is it in the interests of the author/publisher to
make a particular claim? - Which sources has the writer cited?
- What sort of adjectives are used?
- How does the writer rely on authority?
- What does the writer present as fact?
- How does the writer select evidence?
9Some questions you can use to interrogate the
text
Does this follow? How do you know? Where is your
evidence? Who exactly said this and when? Is this
a fact or an opinion? Why? Why not? What
exactly? Are you assuming x is true here? Where
can I check this out? Whats been missed out?
10Applying critical reading strategies
- Before you read the short extract entitled The
Nuclear Solution by Tony Ryan, briefly discuss
your own views on the topic with the person next
to you. - Now read the extract and interrogate the text
11The Nuclear Solution by Tony Ryan
- Nuclear energy is the bridging solution between a
fossil powered past and a solar future. The
French generate 80 per cent of their electricity
from nuclear power, but are now running it down
due to public pressure. However, world famous
ecologist, James Lovelock, says that nuclear
power is the most environmentally friendly
option. It has zero emissions and a minimal waste
problem. For example, a teraWatt hour of
electricity yields 20 tonnes of nuclear waste as
opposed to 10 million tonnes of CO2 from fossil
fuels. The one real fear with nuclear energy is
the potential for terrorist intervention. To
mitigate that we need better security and a means
to localise any release. - http//www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/Issues/2005/Febr
uary/Thenuclearsolution.asp
12Interacting with the text
- You dont have to fully agree or disagree with
what the writer is saying but you can raise
questions about the claims that s/he makes based
on the evidence there is to support you. -
- Examine the following statements that Professor
Ryan makes
13How did you react to these?
- Nuclear energy is the the bridging solution
- It has zero emissions and a minimal waste
problem. - The one real fear with nuclear energy is the
potential for terrorist intervention.
14Reading Critically
- In what ways has this short reading exercise
been similar or different to the way you have
read academic texts in the past?
15Further Reading
- Critical Thinking An Introduction Alec Fisher
CUP 2001 an easy- to-read overview - Critical Reading Checklist http//unilearning.uo
w.edu.au/critical/2b.html - from the Unilearning site (an Australian
website) academic skills) a useful list of
questions - Critical reading questions to ask of yourself
and the text Romy Clark 1993 www.lancs.ac.uk/dept
s/celt/sldc/materials/reading/critical.htm - - questions to think about before, after and
during reading (focus on linguistic analysis of
texts) - Reading Academically University of Southampton
2003 Section 5 Being a Critical Reader