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PROGRAM ANUGERAH NILAM

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Title: PROGRAM ANUGERAH NILAM


1
PROGRAM ANUGERAH NILAM KHEMAH MEMBACA
KEBANGSAAN 2005
2
The Graphic Organizer
  • Graphic Organizers, Mind Maps, Concept Maps are a
    pictorial or graphical way to organize
    information and thoughts for understanding,
    remembering, or writing about.

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How to do a Mind Map
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  • Look for relationships
  • Use lines, colours, arrows, branches or some
    other way of showing connections between the
    ideas generated on your mind map. By
    personalising the map with your own symbols and
    designs - you will be constructing visual and
    meaningful relationships between ideas which will
    assist in your recall and understanding.

7
  • Draw quickly on unlined paper without pausing,
    judging or editing
  • All of these things promote linear thinking and
    the idea of mind mapping is to think creatively
    and in a non-linear manner. Sometimes it is one
    of those obscure possibilities that may become
    the key to your knowledge of a topic.

8
  • Use capitals
  • The idea of using capitals is to encourage you to
    get down only the key points. Capitals are also
    easier to read in a diagram.

9
Put main idea in the centre
  • Most students find it useful to turn their page
    on the side and do a mind map in "landscape"
    style. With the main idea or topic in the middle
    of the page this gives the maximum space for
    other ideas to radiate out from the centre.

10
Leave lots of space
  • Some of the most useful mind maps are those which
    are added to over a period of time. After the
    initial drawing of the mind map you may wish to
    highlight things, add information or add
    questions for the duration of a subject right up
    until exam time. For this reason it is a good
    idea to leave lots of space.

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Summarising Readings
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  • 1. Skim
  • Firstly, read the abstract, introduction,
    conclusion, key headings or chapter headings.
    When skimming through the text observe any
    diagrams, pictures or graphs. This gives you an
    overview of what you are about to read, puts it
    in context and may already give you some clues as
    to where the most relevant parts are located.

14
  • 2. Read
  • Read the article in one sitting
  • ( or chunk it into sections/chapters if it is a
    whole book)
  • and go over any parts you are not quite sure of.

15
  • 3. Mind Map
  • It is important to do the mind map from memory at
    this stage so don't consult the article or any
    other source of information.

16
  • 4. Study
  • The mind map you have just done is very valuable
    as it will show both areas you have understood
    and also areas you are not sure of. Study your
    mind map to discover the gaps in your knowledge
    and refer back to the source material to fill in
    any of these gaps.

17
  • 5. Personalise
  • Using different colours or symbols, add your own
    comments and questions to the mind map. Questions
    relating to relationships, implications,
    alternative approaches, usefulness, clarity,
    personal experience could all be considered at
    this stage. It is in this personalising stage
    where your mind map really starts to help you
    with your learning. The trick now is to address
    all those questions you have raised and to keep
    returning to your mind map with the answers!

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Lectures, Seminars, Workshops and TutorialsSome
students find it useful to create mind maps for
various sessions where new information is
presented
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Sample Lecture Mind Map
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Reading Efficiently by Reading Intelligently
  • Good reading strategies help you to read in a
    very efficient way. Using them, you aim to get
    the maximum benefit from your reading with the
    minimum effort.

23
Strategy 1 Knowing what you want to know
  • The first thing to ask yourself is
  • Why you are reading the text? Are you reading
    with a purpose or just for pleasure? What do you
    want to know after reading it?
  •  

24
Strategy 2 Knowing how deeply to study the
material
  • Where you only need the shallowest knowledge of
    the subject, you can skim material. Here you read
    only chapter headings, introductions and
    summaries.

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Strategy 3 Active Reading
  • When you are reading a document in detail, it
    often helps if you highlight, underline and
    annotate it as you go on. This emphasizes
    information in your mind, and helps you to review
    important points later.
  •  

27
Strategy 4 How to study different sorts of
material
  • Reading Magazines and Newspapers

The most effective way of getting information
from magazines is to scan the contents tables or
indexes and turn directly to interesting
articles.
Reading Individual Articles
News articles are designed to explain the key
points first, and then flesh them out with
detail.
Opinion articles present a point of view.
Feature ArticlesThese are written to provide
entertainment or background on a subject.
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Strategy 5 Reading whole subject
  • Strategy 6 Using glossaries with technical
    documents

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  • These are
  • Knowing what you need to know, and reading
    appropriately
  • Knowing how deeply to read the document
    skimming, scanning or studying
  • Using active reading techniques to pick out key
    points and keep your
  • mind focused on the material
  • Using the table of contents for reading magazines
    and newspapers,
  • and clipping useful articles
  • Understanding how to extract information from
    different article types
  • Creating your own table of contents for reviewing
    material
  • Using indexes, tables of contents, and glossaries
    to help you
  • assimilate technical information

30
A mind map about mind maps!  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
31
A POEM What can you count on your whole life
long?A key, that opens a door, so strong.Behind
that door is a store of knowledge.We've got it
now, needn't wait for college.What is the
answer, what is the key?It's R-E-A-D-I-N-G! When
we were tiny, big books we would hold.We
couldn't read them, but they were gold.Our
parents read to us, and that gave us
pleasure.Those words on the page were such a
treasure.They taught us some words, they gave
the first key.To R-E-A-D-I-N-G!
32
Then off to school we went with expectation.We
learned that reading is the key to education.We
read for fun, and we read to explore.Our
teachers urged us to read even more.They taught
us to research and write what we seeFrom
R-E-A-D-I-N-G! When we're older, we'll still
read every day.For people who matter who have
shown us the way.Our parents, our teachers all
love to read.They've encouraged us and planted a
seed.That seed will grow and will form a treeOf
R-E-A-D-I-N-G!
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So, if you're a teacher, pass along the joyof
unlocking reading for a young girl or boy.When
those letters form words that a child can
read,That spells success, and it fills a
need.It opens doors that you may never seeTo
R-E-A-D-I-N-G! What can we count on, once we
have the key?An open door where the mind soars
free.Books to read are a child's greatest
treasure.They're a gift of love beyond all
measure.So pass along the gift and all children
will beR-E-A-D-I-N-G!
34
Word Meanings From Context Use the context to
help you choose the best meaning or synonym for
each highlighted word.   1.Fortunately, the dizzy
spell was transient. He was able to continue
playing within seconds and had no trouble
winning the match. When you describe an event as
transient, you are saying that __________. a.
it sounds like a trainb. it is quite harmfulc.
it helps you wind. it doesn't last long
35
2. Brea and Elizabeth are having a dispute over
which radio station to play at work. It would be
so much simpler if they both liked the same kind
of music. A dispute is a __________. a. musical
instrumentb. choice of musicc. discoveryd.
disagreement
36
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