Before, during, and after you read - Reading strategies

Painless Reading Comprehension - Darolyn “Lyn” Jones Ed.D. 2016

Before, during, and after you read
Reading strategies

Before you read, reading and graphic organizers remind you of what you already know about a topic and help you to think about what you want or need to know about the topic you will be reading. By asking you to use your background knowledge, you can connect or glue yourself to what you are reading, which makes the reading easier and more interesting.

Image

While you read, graphic organizers help to keep your reading brain alert and awake and focused on what you are reading. They also help you fix up any confusing passages you come across. They may also ask you to predict or think about what is coming next, which again helps to keep you glued to the reading.

After you read, reading and graphic organizers remind you of what you read. They also help you to navigate through all the thousands of words to find the most important ideas in the reading. Finally, they keep what you read in your head.

In this chapter, we are going to practice! You will read passages and try out some more graphic organizers. You will practice using them before you read, while you read, and after you read. You have seen some of the graphic organizers in previous chapters, and a few are new. This is just a practice chapter. You don’t have to do every single one. You should always give new ideas a chance, try them out, but if they don’t work, then you need to move on. What works for one person may not work for another.

I prefer reading organizers. I like fewer lines and more words because I am not a visual learner. I remember words better than I remember images. But, my friend, Julie, who is an art teacher, loves images. She likes graphic organizers with lots of lines and shapes where she just has to write in a few words. She doesn’t mind if the graphic is long and detailed as long as it has lots of images to prompt her thinking.

We all read and think differently. That’s what makes us human. The key to being a successful student isn’t making A’s all the time—it’s understanding how you learn and how you read successfully. If you know how you work best and what tools work best for you, then the A’s will happen. More importantly, you will know yourself. When you know yourself and how you work, you can conquer anything.