Reading Skills
17. Checking Facts
Check facts by using reference sources. Sources include manuals, dictionaries, encyclopedias, reliable Web sites, or unbiased experts.
5. Main Idea
the main idea is the overall idea or message the author is trying to say in a paragraph or story. It can be stated or inferred, or figured out.
9. Point of view
the perspective from which a narrative is told. In first person point of view the story is told by one of the characters. In the third person point of view the story is told by someone outside the story.
22. Broad generalization
Claims that cannot be proved, such as "It's out of this world!"
14.Following Directions
Comprehending what the author wants the reader to do and then doing those steps
25. Bandwagon appeals
Implying everyone does it
26. Paraphrase
means to restate something in your own words to make the meaning clear to yourself
27. Summarize
means to tell briefly in your own words the main ideas of a piece of writing
16. Cause and Effect
A cause is an event, action, or feeling that produces a result; that result is called an effect
20. Faulty reasoning
an argument that does not follow the rules of logic
18. Drawing Conclusions
A conclusion is a logical decision or opinion you reach by pulling together several facts or details
2. Scanning
An active, usually visual search of the environment for information; quickly reading through a written work looking for key words or ideas
13. Context Clues
Information in the reading passage that helps the reader determine the meaning of unfamiliar words or phrases, such as illustrations or the meaning of other words in the text.
4. Inferencing
Intelligent guesses about a story, based on details included in text
10. Prediction
Making an informed guess about what will happen next in a story
23. Hidden Messages
Pictures or words that convey an idea without stating it directly
19. Propaganda Techniques
Propaganda is information that is one-sided or misleading
12. Sequential Order
The order of events in which things happen in a story
8. Tone
The writer's attitude toward his readers and his subject; his mood or moral view. A writer can be formal, informal, playful, ironic
24. Loaded language
Words that appeal to our emotions
21. Advertisement
a paid message intended to attract customers to buy products or services
15. Compare and Contrast
comparison tells how two or more things are alike;contrast tells how two or more things are different
6. Fact/Opinion
fact is something that can be proved; an opinion is a person's judgment or belief. It may be supported by factual evidence, but it cannot be proved
1. Skimming
high speed reading process and involves visually searching the sentences of a page for clues to meaning - general idea of what written work is about
3. Guided Reading
is the strategy whereby a teacher "guides" small groups of students through the text for the purpose of predicting, assisting in comprehension, focusing upon specific skills, and/or coaching the use of various reading strategies which will make the reading effort more successful
7. Purpose,
reason why you read: to learn about a subject, to be entertained, to gain understanding, to be inspired, to take action, make a decision, or to complete a task
11. Metacognition
recognition on the part of the learner that learning has taken place, or is taking place. It involves understanding and appreciating the factors that make learning possible and one's own strategies and processes of learning.