Handouts For Skimming and Scanning PDF
Handouts For Skimming and Scanning PDF
Handouts For Skimming and Scanning PDF
2 What is “skimming?”
It is a strategy that can be taught to students to help them identify the main ideas in
text. It is important to correlate “skimming” to reading, making it clear that it is not word-by-
word reading. Rather it is three to four times faster than normal reading.
Generally, skimming is used to get through text very quickly. Consequently, skimming is
used when students have a lot of reading material to get through, or have been assigned a task
in an activity that requires some quick reading first, prior to completing the task. Skimming has
also been used as a strategy in research when the student wants to determine if a text/article is
a resource than can be used.
b. Look for lists of ideas within the text of the material. The author may use
numerals, such as (1), (2), (3) in the list, or signal words such as first, second,
one major cause, another cause, etc.
Read the summary or last paragraph.
3 What is Scanning?
Scanning is a method of selective reading, when searching for a particular fact or
answer to a question. Scanning can best be described as a looking rather than a
reading process. It allows students to search for key words/concepts/ideas. More often than
not, the student knows exactly what he/she is looking for. So the assigned task is finding out
specific information, such as finding the name of an individual in a telephone directory or
looking for a word in a dictionary.
Find specific words you are looking for on a worksheet by moving your eyes quickly across the
page.
Use scanning to find answers to questions on a worksheet.
3.3 How Do I Use Scanning?
State in your mind specifically the information for which you are looking. Phrase
it in question form, if possible.
Try to anticipate how the answer will appear and what clues you might use to
help you locate the answer.
Determine the organization of the material; it is your most important clue to
where to begin looking for information. Especially when looking up information
contained in charts and tables, the organization of the information is crucial to
rapid scanning.
Use headings and any other aids that will help you identify which sections might
contain the information for which you are looking.
Selectively read and skip through likely sections of the passage, keeping in mind
the specific question you formed and your expectations of how the answer
might appear. Move your eyes down the page in a systematic way.
When you have found the needed information, carefully read the sentences in
which it appears in order to confirm that you have located the correct
information.