CRITICAL READING
STRATEGIES
Here I present seven critical reading strategies that I have shamelessly
stolen from someone else. These are strategies that you can learn readily and
then apply not only to the reading selections in this class, but also to your
other college reading. Although mastering these strategies will not make the
critical reading process an easy one, it can make reading much more satisfying
and productive and thus help you handle difficult material well and with
confidence.
Fundamental to each of these strategies is annotating directly on the
page: underlining key words, phrases, or sentences; writing comments or
questions in the margins; bracketing important sections of the text;
constructing ideas with lines or arrows; numbering related points in sequence;
and making note of anything that strikes you as interesting, important, or
questionable.
Most readers annotate in layers, adding further annotations on second
and third readings. Annotations can be light or heavy, depending on the reader's
purpose and the difficulty of the material.
1. Previewing: Learning about a text before really reading it.
Previewing enables readers
to get a sense of what the text is about and how it is organized before reading
it closely. This simple strategy includes seeing what you can learn from the
headnotes or other introductory material, skimming to get an overview of the
content and organization, and identifying the rhetorical situation.
2. Contextualizing: Placing a text in its historical, biographical, and
cultural contexts.
When you read a text, you read it through the lens of your own
experience. Your understanding of the words on the page and their significance
is informed by what you have come to know and value from living in a particular
time and place. But the texts you read were all written in the past, sometimes
in a radically different time and place. To read critically, you need to
contextualize, to recognize the differences between your contemporary values
and attitudes and those represented in the text.
3. Questioning to understand and remember: Asking questions about the
content.
As
students, you are accustomed (I hope) to teachers asking you questions about
your reading. These questions are designed to help you understand a reading and
respond to it more fully, and often this technique works. When you need to
understand and use new information though it is most beneficial if you write
the questions, as you read the text for the first time. With this strategy, you
can write questions any time, but in difficult academic readings, you will
understand the material better and remember it longer if you write a question
for every paragraph or brief section. Each question should focus on a main
idea, not on illustrations or details, and each should be expressed in your own
words, not just copied from parts of the paragraph.
4. Reflecting on challenges to your beliefs and values: Examining your personal
responses.
The
reading that you do for this class might challenge your attitudes, your
unconsciously held beliefs, or your positions on current issues. As you read a
text for the first time, mark an X in the margin at each point where you fell a
personal challenge to your attitudes, beliefs, or status. Make a brief note in
the margin about what you feel or about what in the text created the challenge.
Now look again at the places you marked in the text where you felt personally
challenged. What patterns do you see?
5. Outlining and summarizing: Identifying the main ideas and restating them
in your own words.
Outlining and summarizing are especially helpful strategies for
understanding the content and structure of a reading selection. Whereas
outlining revels the basic structure of the text, summarizing synopsizes a
selection's main argument in brief. Outlining may be part of the annotating
process, or it may be done separately (as it is in this class). The key to both
outlining and summarizing is being able to distinguish between the main ideas
and the supporting ideas and examples. The main ideas form the backbone, the strand
that hold the various parts and pieces of the text together. Outlining the main
ideas helps you to discover this structure. When you make an outline, don't use
the text's exact words.
Summarizing begins with outlining, but instead of merely listing the
main ideas, a summary recomposes them to form a new text. Whereas outlining
depends on a close analysis of each paragraph, summarizing also requires
creative synthesis. Putting ideas together again -- in your own words and in a
condensed form -- shows how reading critically can lead to deeper understanding
of any text.
6. Evaluating an argument: Testing the logic of a text as well as its
credibility and emotional impact.
All writers make assertions that want you to accept
as true. As a critical reader, you should not accept anything on face value but
to recognize every assertion as an argument that must be carefully evaluated.
An argument has two essential parts: a claim and support. The claim asserts a
conclusion -- an idea, an opinion, a judgment, or a point of view -- that the
writer wants you to accept. The support includes reasons (shared beliefs,
assumptions, and values) and evidence (facts, examples, statistics, and
authorities) that give readers the basis for accepting the conclusion. When you
assess an argument, you are concerned with the process of reasoning as well as
its truthfulness (these are not the same thing). At the most basic level, in
order for an argument to be acceptable, the support must be appropriate to the
claim and the statements must be consistent with one another.
7. Comparing and contrasting related readings: Exploring likenesses and
differences between texts to understand them better.
Many of the authors we read are concerned with the same issues or
questions, but approach how to discuss them in different ways. Fitting a text
into an ongoing dialectic helps increase understanding of why an author
approached a particular issue or question in the way he or she did.
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