SQ3R - Los Angeles Mission College
Download
Report
Transcript SQ3R - Los Angeles Mission College
Strategies for Textbook
Reading
Chapter 1
SQ3R
SQ3R
A Reading -Study Strategy
Survey
Question
Read
Recite
Review
Step One -- Survey
To survey the chapter means to preview the chapter
before you read it.
The Three Goals of Surveying – to get
A general overview
A feeling for the writer’s style and organization
A sense of what’s important
An idea of the chapter’s natural breaks or
divisions
How to Survey (7 steps)
Read the title
Read any introductory material. Pay attention to
chapter outlines, lists of questions, goals, and
objectives.
3. Formulate a general question about the chapter’s
overall point or points.
4. Read each heading and the first sentence
following each heading.
1.
2.
Survey -- 7 Steps (continued)
5. Look at all visual aids. Read all captions and
explanations accompanying the graphics.
6. Read all bold-printed or italicized words and
words in the margins.
7. Read end-of-the-chapter summaries and questions,
or read the last page if there is no summary.
Why Survey?
Get the big picture
Decide what’s important
Know the main points
Connect what you already know to
what you don’t know
Prepare to read
Step Two -- Question
Turn chapter headings/subheadings into
questions to guide your reading
–
–
–
–
Ask what?
Ask who?
Ask why?
Ask how?
Where? and when? questions give you a
very limited answer.
Example Heading:
Language Symbolizes Reality
Ask:
What does it mean to say language
symbolizes reality?
How does the nature of language affect
our verbal messages?
Why does language symbolize reality?
Why Question
Stay focused
Gives purpose
Creates interest
Step Three -- Read
Never study read without a highlighter and pencil in your
hand.
Read to answer your guide questions for each section and
subsection. Rereading is common. Read every word.
Underline and/or highlight. Be selective.
Underline/highlight only the words and phrases you need.
When you go back and reread your underlining or
highlighting, the text should have meaning.
Read (continued)
Make notes in the margins.
Mark important text items such as dates, names,
concepts, and key points. Use circles, stars,
arrows, numbers.
Your goal is to read the chapter thoroughly only
once.
Why Read
To gain information
To prepare for lecture
To prepare for discussion
To prepare for tests
Vary Your Reading Rate
Adjust the speed with which you read!
– Don’t be afraid to SLOW DOWN if the
text becomes difficult
Reading Rates include:
•
•
•
•
Scanning
Skimming
Study Reading
Close or Analytical Reading
Step Four -- Recite
To recite means to say something out loud.
After each section, stop and test your
comprehension
Recite the answers to your guide questions
Write out your own answers
Put it in your own words
Write a summary or create an outline
Write notes (in book or on paper)
Create 3x5 (or 4x6) cards
Why Recite?
Improves concentration
Helps you remember the
material
When to Recite?
Immediately after
reading each section
Review – after reading
Look at the headings and see what you can
remember about each one
Skim over your underlined/highligthed
words
Add margin notes and markings
Before tests
– MAKE AN INFORMAL OUTLINE!
(See page 19 in RFR for an example)
Highlighting/Underlining
Be selective
Highlight/underline key points
Highlight/underline just enough to use
as review
According to procrastination expert Neil Fiore, Ph.D., fear of failure is
the main reason why people postpone the inevitable. Thus,
procrastinators delay because of their anxiety about not having the
required skills, or knowledge to complete the task at hand. They would
rather fail to try rather than be exposed as stupid or incapable.
Writing in the margins
Summarize key points
Compare opposing points of view
Cite your own personal experience
Jot down potential test questions.
Broca’s area – located in
left frontal region.
Wernicke’s area –
located in temporal
region.
The first is Broca’s area, located in the left
frontal region near the motor cortex. Patients who
have damage in this area …etc. Wernicke’s
area, is in the temporal region of the left
hemisphere … etc.
Strategies for remembering new words
Circle new words in the book(s) you are reading
Write the word in your Vocabulary Journal (and
look up the meaning)
Create a visual image of the word
– Monarchy means “rule by one person”
– Imagine someone wearing a crown & sitting on a
throne
Incorporate the new words into your emails or
conversations
USE IT OR LOSE IT!