|
IELTS阅读方法与技巧(上)
READING STRATEGIES AND SKILLS
This course will give you the opportunity to develop
and practice reading strategies and skills which can
be applied to all forms of IELTS tests. The strategies
and skills you will practice are as follows:
1 Predicting
2 Skimming
3 Scanning
4 Detailed reading
5 Guessing unknown words
6 Understanding main ideas
7 Inferring
8 Understanding text organization
9 Assessing a writer's purpose
10 Evaluating a writer's attitude.
1 Predicting
Before you read a text in detail, it is possible to
predict what information you may find in it. You will
probably have some knowledge of the subject already,
and you can use this knowledge to help you anticipate
what a reading text contains.
After looking at the title, for example, you can ask
yourself what you know and do not know about the subject
before you read the text. Or you can formulate questions
that you would like to have answered by reading the
text. These exercises will help you focus more effectively
on the ideas in a text when you actually start reading.
To help you predict, you may also use skimming and
scanning strategies as described below.
2 Skimming
Skimming involves reading quickly through a text to
get an overall idea of its contents. Features of the
text that can help you include the following:
(a) Title
(b) Sub-title(s)
(c) Details about the author
(d) Abstract
(e) Introductory paragraph
(f) First, second and last sentences of following paragraphs
(g) Concluding paragraph
A text may not contain all of these features - there
may be no abstract, for example, and no sub-titles -
but you can usually expect to find at least (a), (e),
(f) and (g). Focusing on these will give you an understanding
of the overall idea or gist of the text you are reading
- in other words, a general understanding as opposed
to a detailed reading.
Another term for this kind of reading is surveying.
Surveying can be described as looking quickly through
a book, chapter of a book, article from a journal, etc.,
to decide whether or not it is suitable for your purpose.
To decide whether or not a text is suitable, especially
if it is a book, you will also need to focus on the
following features in addition to those mentioned above:
(a) Edition and date of publication
(b) Table of contents
(c) Foreword
(d) Introduction
(e) Index
3 Scanning
When you scan a text, again you look quickly through
it. However, unlike skimming, scanning involves looking
for specific words, scanning involves rapid reading
for the specific rather than the general; for particular
details rather than the overall idea.
When you read a text, for example, you may want to find
only a percentage figure or the dates of particular
historical events instead of the main ideas. Scanning
will help you find such information more efficiently.
4 Detailed reading
A second and third reading of a text will also focus
on the secondary ideas and details which support, explain
and develop the main ideas. This can be described as
a more comprehensive reading. It involves a slower and
more careful reading process. At this stage you can
also try to guess the meaning of unfamiliar vocabulary.
5 Guessing unknown words
It is unlikely that you will understand 100 percent
of the vocabulary in a text, especially at a first reading.
Use first the context and then your own knowledge of
the subject to help you guess the meaning of unknown
words. At your first reading of a text it is usually
best not to stop and consult your dictionary. This will
interrupt your process of reading and understanding.
often the meaning of unfamiliar words and phrases becomes
clear as you continue to read through the text. The
dictionary can be used at a later stage.
In using the context to help you guess unknown vocabulary,
you can refer first to immediate context and then to
the wider context in which a word is found. The immediate
context is the sentence in which a word is found, and
sometimes the sentences immediately before and after
this. The wider context can include other sentences
and even other paragraphs in a text. Both forms of context
can often provide important information which help you
guess the meaning of unfamiliar words.
6 Understanding main ideas
You will practice recognizing the main ideas contained
within a text. In the process of skimming you will already
have identified some of these main ideas. During a second
and third reading you can recognize and understand them
more fully. Each paragraph will usually contain one
main idea. sometimes referred to as the paragraph topic.
The reading materials provide several exercises which
help you identify and understand the main ideas in a
text. Knowing the key points in a reading text is vital
in assessing its importance and relevance for your needs.
Understanding the main ideas will also lead you to an
understanding of a writer's organization.
7 Inferring
Sometimes a writer will suggest or express something
indirectly in a text. In other words, a writer will
imply something and leave it to the reader to infer
or understand what is meant. When writers do this, they
rely to some extent on the knowledge of their readers
- knowledge of a subject or cultural knowledge, for
example. Inferring a writer's meaning is sometimes important
in the process of understanding a reading text.
8 Understanding text organization
Writers structure, or organize, their writing in many
different ways. Recognizing the way in which a text
has been organized will help you understand its meaning
more fully. A writer may want, for example, to outline
a situation, discuss a problem and propose a solution.
This will usually result in a particular pattern of
organization. Or a writer may want to compare and contrast
two ideas and will choose one of two basic structures
commonly used to compare and contrast.
Another feature related to organization is a writer's
use of time. To give an account of events or describe
a process, writers will often use a chronological order,
in which events are recounted in the order in which
they have occurred. Other writers will choose to organize
an account of events in different ways, perhaps with
repeated contrasts between past and present time.
9 Assessing a writer's purpose
Once you understand the organization of a text, you
can then recognize the writer's purpose more clearly.
The text organization a writer selects will partly depend
upon his or her particular purpose. A writer may want
to inform or persuade, and he or she will select a structure
or pattern of organization according to this purpose.
A writer may also intend to do both of these things
in a written text - to inform as will as persuade. In
such cases it is often helpful to try to assess which
of these purposes seems to be more important or dominant.
10 Evaluating a writer's attitude.
Writers are not necessarily neutral or objective when
they write, particularly if the are trying to persuade
readers to agree with their opinions. It is important
that you recognize what an author's attitude is in relation
to the ideas or information being presented. This is
because such attitudes can influence the ways in which
information is presented. You will be looking at ways
in which a writer's attitude may be identified. You
will also practice evaluating how relatively neutral
or biased his or her attitude may be.
|