How to Teach Reading

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How to Teach Reading

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Title: How to Teach Reading


1
How to Teach Reading
  • A Why Teach Reading?

2
  • 1. What is your response to the following
    questions?
  • a What reasons are there for getting students to
    read texts in English?
  • b What different elements of English can students
    study in a reading text?

3
  • 2. Complete the following sentences.
  • a When I learnt a foreign language reading was
  • b I think reading in the foreign language
    classroom is
  • c Students need to learn how to read

4
  • B What kind of reading should students do?
  • Authentic materials appropriate for
    beginner/elementary students
  • When reading in class, students should only be
    given texts which are authentic.

5
  • C What reading skills should students acquire?
  • Scanning (searching a text quickly for specific
    information)
  • Skimming (reading a text quickly to get the
    general idea)
  • Reading for detailed information
  • Reading for pleasure

6
  • D What are the principles behind the teaching of
    reading?
  • 1. What would you expect to get out of a good
    reading text
  • a as a teacher? b as a students?
  • 2. What have the following concepts got to do
    with using reading texts?
  • active skill appropiate tasks engagement
    exploitation prediction response to content

7
  • E What do reading sequences look like?
  • 1. Look at the reading text and complete the
    tasks which follow it.

8
  • Your Sleep and You
  • Miriam Kellaway Reports
  • How much beauty sleep do you need? According to
    Philip Sedgewick, research fellow at the Sleep
    Disorders Clinic at the Department of Mental
    Health at St. George Hospital, most of us need
    roughly eight hours a night if we want to stay
    healthy. And we need to have a regular routine
    too.

9
  • Problems for tired people
  • ?More chance of bugs(???) and infections
  • ? Shift workers (people who work at different
    times of day and night) get more infectious
    diseases than the rest of us?
  • ? More chance of stress
  • ? More need for energy food like chocolate,
    coffee, etc. Students in the USA say tiredness
    causes overeating. In a survey of hospital nurses
    across the country, ninety percent of those
    working on the night shif gained weight.
  • ? Irritablity, grumpness(??)

10
  • Canadian sleep researcher Harvey Modofsky, at
    the Toronto Western Hospital took blood from
    sleeping people and he found that sleeping bodies
    were fighting infection better than those that
    were awake and in a recent study of 9, 000 adults
    in the UK those who slept between six and a half
    and eight and a half hours a night were more
    healthy than those who slept less.

11
  • REM Non-REM
  • REM stands for Rapid Eye Movement. Thats the
    time we dream, when we sort out all the memories,
    thoughts and feelings in our head. Non-REM is
    often called Deep Sleep.
  • Without REM people become forgetful, irritable
    and less able to concentrate.
  • Deep sleep provides us with physical and mental
    recovery.

12
  • Things not to do in bed (accrding to sleep
    experts)
  • Eat
  • Read
  • Watch television
  • Work
  • Drink caffeine
  • Smoke cigarettes
  • Have alcohol (it interferes with REM sleep. It
    can make you tired and irritable the morning
    after the night before).

13
  • A .What level do you think it might be suitable
    for?
  • B. What kind of comprehension tasks could you do
    with it?
  • C. How would you get students Engaged with the
    topic of the text?
  • D. What language, if any, would you focus the
    students attention on in the reading text for a
    Study exercise?

14
  • 2. Can you think of answers to these
    reading-related questions?
  • A. What kind of Engage activity would you use
    before students have about rock music?
  • B. What follow-up activity might you use after
    your intermediate students have read a text about
    animal rights?
  • C. Where would you look for authentic reading
    materials for your beginner students? What would
    they be able to cope with?
  • D. Write a mock car advertisement as a reading
    text for beginner students.
  • How easy is it? What problems did you have
    doing it?

15
  • What are the principles behind the teaching of
    reading?
  • Principle 1 Reading is not a passive skill
  • Reading is a incredibly active occupation. To do
    it successfully, we have to understand what the
    words mean, see the picturethat the words are
    painting, understand the arguments, and work out
    if we agree with them. If we do not do these
    thingsand if students do not do these
    thingsthen we only just scratch the surface of
    the text and we quickly forget it.

16
  • Principle 2 Students need to be engaged with
    what they are reading.
  • As with everything else in lessons, students who
    are not engaged with the readingnot actively
    interested in what they are doingare less likely
    to benefit from it. When they are really fired up
    by the topic or the task, they get much more from
    what is in front of them.

17
  • Principle 3 Students should be encouraged to
    respond to the content of a reading text, not
    just to the language.
  • Of course, it is important to study reading
    texts for the way they use language, the number
    of paragraphs they contain and how many times
    they use relative clauses. But the meaning, the
    message of the text, is just as important and we
    must give students a chance to respond to that
    message in some way. It is especially important
    that they should be allowed to express their
    feelings about the topicthus provoking personal
    engagement with it and the language.

18
  • Principle 4 Prediction is a major factor in
    reading.
  • When we read texts in our own language, we
    frequently have a good idea of the content before
    we actually read. Book covers give us a hint of
    whats in the book, photographs and headlines
    hint at what articles are about and reports look
    like reports before we read a single word.

19
  • The moment we get this hintthe book cover, the
    headlines, the word-processed pageour brain
    starts predicting what we are going to read.
    Expectations are set up and the the active
    process of reading is ready to begin. Teachers
    should give students hints so that they can
    predict whats coming too. It will make them
    better and more engaged readers.

20
  • Principle 5 Match the task to the topic
  • We could give studnets Hamlets famous
    soliloquy To be or not to be and ask them to
    say how many times the infinitive is used. We
    could give them a restaurant menu and ask them to
    list the ingredients alphabetically. There might
    be reasons for both tasks, but, on the face of
    it, they look a bit silly. We will probably be
    more intersted in what Hamlet means and what the
    menu foods actually are.

21
  • Once a dcision has been taken about what
    reading text the students are going to read, we
    need to choose good reading tasksthe right kind
    of questions, egaging and useful puzzles, etc.
    The most interesting text can be undermined by
    asking boring and inapproriate question the most
    commonplace passage can be made really exciting
    with imaginative and challenging tasks.

22
  • Priciple 6 Good teachers exploit reading texts
    to the full.
  • Any reading text is full of sentences, words,
    ideas, descriptions, etc. It doesnt make sense
    just to get students to read it and then drop it
    to move on to something else. Good teachers
    integrate the reading text into interesting class
    sequence, using the topic for discussion and
    further tasks, using the language for Study and
    later Activation(??).

23
What do reading sequences look like?
  • In the following 4 examples, we are going to
    look four different kinds of reading texts and
    four different kinds of reading tasks. In each
    case we will see how the reading text fits into
    an ESA(Engage,Study, Activate) sequence.

24
Example 1(elementary)
  • In the first example for elementary, the teacher
    has introduced the topic of attraction. He asks
    the students what they find attraction in a
    person. With luck, the discussion of the topic
    should be enjoyable and amusing.
  • He then tells the studnets they have to fill in
    the following chart about what their partner
    thinks is important when he or she meets a new
    friend.

25
Very important important Not very important
Physical appearance
Clothes
Job or education
Money and possessions
Personality or character
Religion
Politics
Other

26
  • The students now have to list the qualities in
    order of importance for them as a whole class.
    The teacher then tells the class to read the text
    on the next page to see how their opinions are
    different from the men and women being described.
  • When the students have read the text, the teacher
    allows them to discuss their answers in pairs,
    This is to give them a chance to clear up any
    small comprehension problems before they talk in
    front of the class.
  • The students now have to complete the following
    task.

27
  • Read the first part of the article again. Use
    these words to answer the questions below.
  • eyes legs face smile figure teath
  • Which do men think are most important?
  • Which do women think are most important?
  • Do you agree?

28
  • The Main Attraction
  • Suddenly it happens. You just know hes the man
    for you, and you havent even been introduced
    yet. But how do you know? And can you make sure
    he feels the same way? Company investigate

29
  • What first attracts men to women? Whereas women
    tend to notice the eyes, teeth and smile in
    particular, men will be more likely to assess the
    face in general and pay more attention to figure
    and legs.
  • According to a recent survey by Singles magazine,
    these are the top ten attributes that men and
    women look for in each other, in order of
    priority.

30
  • Men look for a woman who is
  • Attractive
  • Sincere
  • Slim
  • A non-smoker
  • With a sense of humor
  • Affectionate
  • Tall
  • kind

31
  • Women look for a man who is
  • Tall
  • Professional
  • With a sense of humor
  • Attractive(not necessarily handsome)
  • Sincere
  • Intelligent
  • Handsome
  • kind

32
  • As a follow-up to these reading tasks, the
    teacher asks the students to think of people who
    they find attractive (friends, film stars,
    athlets, etc.). They are then asked to say what
    the most attractive thing about them is. The
    discussion can lead on to descriptive writing,
    etc.

33
  • Notice that this patchwork lesson(????) started
    with an Engage activity, them went on to an
    Activate exercise (working with a partner),
    followed by an Active reading (do you agree with
    the passage?), a Study reading (answer the
    questions) before being followed up with Active
    exercise.

34
  • Notice too, how important the first Active
    exercise was it gave the students a chance to
    predict what was coming.

35
Example 2 (lower intermediate)
  • In the second example, the class is once again
    prepared for reading by discussion what, if
    anything, the students know about ghosts. The
    teacher may get them to say whether they believe
    in ghosts or not and if they have ever seen one.

36
  • After that, the textbook from which this reading
    text is taken gives students some information
    about ghosts (that they are ususlly the result of
    a tragic death, that they appear at night, etc.).

37
  • The students are now asked to read the text on
    page 74 to say whether Orcas Manor is a typical
    haunted house. This is a general reading task
    designed to let them get an overal picture of the
    text.
  • For the next reading, the students are asked more
    detailed Study-type questions, eg.

38
Complete the table
Which ghost He killed . You can see him in .
1previous owner
2 visitors
3 The corridors
4
39
  • The students can check their answers in pairs
    before the teacher puts the chart on the borad
    and has individuals come out and fill it in to
    check that the whole class have understood the
    text.

40
  • Sandford Orcas Manor(??)
  • Next to the church in the village of Sandford
    Orcas there is an old gatehouse. If you go
    through the gate you arrive at the sinister
    (????)manor house which is famous for its large
    number of ghosts.

41
  • The present owner of the manor says it is
    difficult to keep servants because the ghosts
    frighten them. Many people have seen the ghosts
    of the previous owner. He was a farmer who
    committed suicide by hanging himself from the
    gatehouse, and he often appears in the garden
    wearing old working clothes.

42
  • Another ghost is an 18th century priest who used
    to kill visitors while they were asleep in their
    beds. He still sometimes frightens guests in the
    middle of the night by standing over their beds
    holding a knife.

43
  • The ghost of a servant sometimes walks along the
    dark corridors of the house. He murdered his
    master at Sandford Orcas, but nobody knows why.

44
  • But perhaps the most frightening story is of a
    young man who grew up in the house and them
    became a sailor. While he was at sea, he killed a
    boy, and then went mad. When he retured to
    Sandford Orcas, they locked him in a room at the
    back of the house. He never left the room again,
    and died there several years later. On some
    nights when the moon is full, you can hear him
    screaming and banging on the door of the room.

45
  • The teacher wants students to understand how we
    use pronouns to refer back to subjects we have
    already mentioned. He asks them who or what it,
    them and He refer to in paragraph two. What
    do they, their, he refer to in paragraph
    three?

46
  • As a follow-up task, students can write a
    description of a haunted house which they can
    invent. They can do this individually or in pairs
    or groups.

47
  • Once again, a patchwork lesson has started with
    an Engage session where teacher and students talk
    about haunted houses and read some information
    about ghosts. Then they read for general
    understandingan Active type of exercisebefore
    Study the textboth for meaning and then for
    language use (personal pronoun use in text
    writing) and then doing another Active follow-up.

48
Example 3(intermediate)
  • In this example for intermediate students, the
    students first look fat a picture of people
    sunbathing and say whether it is a positive, safe
    and attractive imageor whether it is the
    opposite.
  • They are then shown the following magazine
    article.

49
  • Polly Griffiths Goes down to the Sea for Advice
    on How to Look Good and Stay Safe

50
  • So you think youre too pale and want to get a
    good suntan this summer? Why not? Except that
    unless youre careful the sun can make your skin
    old and leathery and can even give you skin
    cancer.

51
  • If you must sunbathe (and lets face it, lots of
    us think its a good idea), then have a look at
    these gorgeous guys and babies I found on the
    beach and see which of them is like you.

52
  • Im the type who always burns. Its because Im
    fair-skinned and Ive got red hair and freckles.
    Thats why Im so good-looking! But I still burn
    unless I use a really high APF (sun protection
    factor) about 20 in strong sun.

53
  • Melinda
  • I have to be careful cause Im the type who
    burns easily. But I do tan in the end. If youve
    got fair hair and blue eyes like me youd better
    use quite a strong sunscreen (an SPF of 15 to
    start with)

54
  • Jean
  • Yeah I tan easily. People like me who are
    dark-skinned (with dark hair and brown eyes) are
    not only realy cool but we go even browner in the
    sun. I still use a sunscreen though, something
    light with an SPF of about 6

55
  • Alice
  • Me, Ive got built-in protection! I dont burn,
    but I dont sunbathes anyway. I mean what for? I
    like messing around on the beach though.

56
  • So the message is Check out what kind of skin
    youve got and then be safe and sensible and
    have a good time! See you at poolside Bar!

57
  • The teacher checks that they have understood by
    asking them questions like What sun protection
    factor does Roger use? Does Melinda burn? Who
    is dark-skinned, fair skinned? etc. Students
    then use language from the article to describe
    themselves.

58
  • In this straight arrow lesson, the teacher strats
    by Engaging the students with discussions of
    sunbathing. They then Study the text before going
    on to Activate the knowledge which the text has
    given them.

59
Example 4(intermediate to advance)
  • The final example shows that reading does not
    have to be a static activity dealing with prose
    passages. We can make much more dynamic than
    than.
  • The teacher wants to get his intermediate
    students reading poetry, both because he thinks
    they will enjoy it (if done in an Engaging way)
    and because he thinks it can provide a useful
    focus for language study.

60
  • He askes students if they like poetry. Can they
    remember any poems? What are they about? What do
    poets normally write about?

61
  • He tells them that he is going to put students in
    groups of nine. Each student in the group will
    get a line from a poem. They can read it aloud
    but they must not show it to the other eight
    members of the group. The task of the group is to
    put the lines in the right order for the poem.
  • He then hands out the following lines (at random)
    to the nine members of the group.

62
  • And would suffice.
  • But if it had to
    perish twice
  • From what Ive tasted desire
  • I think I know enough of hate
  • Ice
    is so nice
  • I hold with those who favour fire.
  • Some say
    in ice.
  • To sat that for destruction
  • Some say the world will
    end in fire.

63
  • They read their lines out to each other and see
    if they can put them in the right order. Ideally,
    the groups will be standing up in circles so that
    the members can change position when the group
    have decided where their lines come in the poem.

64
  • As the activity goes on, the teacher goes round
    the groups listening to how they are getting on.
    If they are not making any headway, he may prompt
    them by saying Shall I tell you what the first
    line is? or Think of the sounds of the last
    word in each line etc.

65
  • When the students( think they) have finished the
    task, the teacher reads the poem aloud for them
    to check their version. This is what he reads

66
  • Some say the world will end in fire,
  • Some say in ice.
  • From what Ive tasted of desire
  • I hold with those who favour fire.
  • But if it had to perish twice
  • I think I know enough of hate
  • To say that for destruction
  • Ice is nice
  • And would suffice.

67
  • The groups have to decide on a good title for the
    poem which they can them compare with the
    original (which is Fire and Icethe poem is by
    Robert Frost).
  • The teacher can then ask students to say whether
    they like the poem and whether they think it is
    funny, sad, serious or tragic. He then gets them
    to describe the rhyme scheme of the last words in
    each line (, B, A, A, B, C, D, B, B).

68
  • The teacher then gives students first lines of
    poems and tells them to write down their own (he
    can make it the worst poem in the worlds
    competition to bring in humor) using a particular
    rhyme scheme, for example.

69
  • This reading activity works because students
    really have to engage with the meaning and
    construction of the poem. When they are trying to
    put the poem in order, you will hear them
    discussing rhymes, punctuaton, logic and word
    meaning. It is popular with students (if used
    only occasionally), even with those who are not
    natural fans of poetry. Interestingly, after an
    initial Engage session, it quickly becomes a
    perfect mixture of Study and Activationstudying
    the poems construction whilst still activating
    all the language they know.

70
More reading suggestons
  1. Students read small ads for holidays, partners,
    things for sale etc., to make a choice. They
    amplify the ads into descriptions.
    (intermediate/advanced)
  2. Students read jumbled instructions for a simple
    operation (using a public phonebox etc.) and have
    to put the instruction in correct order.
    (elementary/intermediate)

71
  • 3. Students read a recipe and after matching
    instructions with pictures, they have to cook the
    food! (elementary/intermediate)
  • 4. Students are given a number of words from a
    text. In groups, they have to predict what kind
    of a text they are going to read. They then read
    the text to see if their original predictions
    were correct. (elementary/intermediate)

72
  • 6. Students have to match topic sentences with
    the paragraphs they come from. (intermediate and
    uper intermediate)
  • 7. Students read a text and have to guess which
    of the group of people they think wrote the text
    (using the picture provided). (lower
    intermediate/advanced)

73
  • 8. Students read a narrative with the end
    missing. In groups, they have to supply their own
    ending. (intermediate/advanced)
  • 9. Students read a factfileabout a country,
    population, machine or process etc. They have to
    convert the information into bar graphs(???)or
    pie charts(???). (intermediate/advanced)

74
  • The End
  • Thank you!
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