Reading Comprehension Strategies: Unal Ulker Ishik University
Reading Comprehension Strategies: Unal Ulker Ishik University
Reading Comprehension Strategies: Unal Ulker Ishik University
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Unal Ulker
Ishik University
doi: 10.23918/vesal2017.a37
ABSTRACT
The academic success of the university students greatly depends on the mastery of an academic
reading skill. However, students as well as teachers, take the learning of this skill for granted, as
they tend to presuppose that reading skill is acquired as a part of their secondary education. As a
result, most first-year students employ non university strategies to read academic texts, which leads
to a surface approach to reading and prevents students from a better understanding of the material.
This paper will discuss the strategies that involve students in taking a deep approach to reading
academic texts.
Key words: reading skill, academic reading strategies, reading for academic purposes
INTRODUCTION
Reading plays an important role in any educational system, so improvement of reading skills is
vital, which is possible with the help of effective reading strategies. Reading strategies are defined
in different ways. For McNamara (2012) "A reading comprehension strategy is a cognitive or
behavioral action that is enacted under particular contextual conditions, with the goal of improving
some aspect of comprehension"(p.6). Edge (2002) defines reading comprehension strategies as
"strategies that encourage your students to use prior knowledge, experiences, careful thought, and
evaluation to help them decide how to practically apply what they know to all reading
situations"(p. 4).
Basically reading comprehension strategies may be defined as "a complex process involving
interactions between the reader and the text, using multiple skills" (Medina, 2007, p. 4), because
among the variety of known strategies "some strategies work for some students, and other
- 494 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
strategies work for other students, just as some strategies work best with certain types of reading
material, other strategies work best with other types of reading material" (Medina, 2007, p. 6).It is
important to understand that improving students' reading comprehension teachers should take into
consideration students' skill level, group, dynamic, age, gender, cultural background, as well as
the type of the text they deal with, to determine the approach to take.
Researches show that reading comprehensibility directly depends on the strategies readers use
(McNamara, 2012; Bachman & Palmer, 2009; Bachman, 1990; Connolly, 2007; Blachowicz &
Ogle, 2008; Roe et al., 2011).Strategies are especially necessary to those students who are
struggling most (students with less domain knowledge and low reading skills). Using strategies for
developing and construction of meaning before, during and after reading allow readers to connect
the information they are reading about now with what they have learnt in the past(Blachowicz &
Ogle, 2008).
According to Babbitt (2002), the use of reading strategies improves the reading abilities of most
students, improves their interaction with the text, and finally students not only understand the text
but also remember every part of the story they have read. For successful use of strategies, teachers
need to develop a scaffold for their students carefully according to their needs, abilities and the
type of print they work with.
- 495 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Summarization
Multiple Strategy
The purposes of reading may vary and, accordingly, the strategies applied to comprehension must
be different. McNamara (2012) introduces three reading comprehension strategies for the
proficient reader:
For less successful readers McNamara (2009) suggests six reading comprehension strategies:
1. Comprehension monitoring.
2
Test of English as a Foreign Language
3
International English Language Testing System
4
Akademik Personel veLisans Eğitimi Giriş Sınavı - Academic Personnel and Uderagraduate Education Entrance
Exam (Turkey)
- 496 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
It is the process of students' reading and analyzing the level of understanding, as the awareness of
low understanding may require the use of other strategies to increase understanding of the text and
their comprehensibility.
2. Paraphrasing.
Students restate the text in different words/own words, that help less skilled readers to improve the
basic understanding of the information contained in the words/sentences/paragraphs and the whole
text.
3. Elaboration.
It is the process of making inferences/questions that involves the linking of the meaning of the
word/sentence/text to existing related knowledge.
5. Predictions.
This strategy involves students' thinking about what may appear next in the text. This strategy is
pretty uncommon when reading scientific texts, but for narrative texts may be pretty effective.
6. Bridging.
It is the strategy that develops students' ability to link ideas and understanding the relation between
sentences/paragraphs/chapters in the text. Making inferences is critical to understanding and to
successfully comprehend the text because the reader must make inferences to build a coherent
mental model of the information presented in the text.
The six strategies mentioned encourage the readers to use a set of strategies, which lead to better
understanding and improvement of readers' ability to explain the text.
In higher education most second language learners consciously or unconsciously already have
some reading comprehension strategies in their first language, however, not all students have
effective strategies. The subject of matter is also whether they are able to use them working with
- 497 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
texts of academic nature. Brown (2001) recommends a more detailed list of strategies to apply to
classroom techniques, that provide students with the techniques to read the text critically. Some of
them are related to bottom-up procedures, and others involve top-bottom procedures. All together
construct a mixed strategies approach to reading comprehension.
- 498 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
The strategy of semantic mapping/clustering helps students to organize the ideas/information from
the text into order/groups to understand the relation between the pieces of data and to see the whole
picture (Mozayan, Fazilatfar, Khosravi, & Askari, 2012).
7. Guessing.
This strategy involves a quite broad range of procedures. Students may need to be able to make
guesses about different aspects of the text:
meaning of a word
grammatical link
discourse rapport
hidden meaning
cultural links
semantic content
Using this strategy reading becomes a kind of "guessing game"(Goodman, 2003), and "as sooner
learners understand this game, the better off they are"(Brown, 2001). To be more successful and
accurate in guesses students need a lot of appropriate practice.
8. Vocabulary analysis.
Guessing/recognition the meaning of unknown words refers to readers' knowledge of word
structure and its peculiarities. It is necessary for students to be aware of the meaning of key
information transmitted through prefixes, suffixes, roots, grammatical and semantic contexts.
- 499 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
opportunity to understand how the idea is developed in the text and can greatly improve students'
reading efficiency.
Reading strategies are "plans for solving problems encountered in constructing meaning" (Duffy,
1993, p. 232). Among the wide range of techniques, it is the readers' own decision (if necessary
with teacher assistance) to choose the most appropriate set of strategies for better comprehension
of the written material. It is clear that "the strategy use is different in more proficient and less
proficient readers"(Janzen, 2002, p. 287). Generally "... strategies are essential, not only to
successful comprehension but to overcoming reading problems and becoming a better reader and
comprehender" (McNamara, 2009, p. 36).
CONCLUSION
There are a lot of learners of foreign language students for whom reading is the most important
goal. They want to be able to read for pleasure, for their education, or for a career. In fact, whether
learners do it consciously or unconsciously, the most English language learners for academic
purposes primarily want to acquire is the ability to read effectively. In any academic institution,
reading is what students mostly do from the beginning to the end of the program. It is not possible
to imagine a scientific research without reading and all required strategies applied to understand,
sanalyze, or synthesize of written material.
Today the major emphasize is put on the importance of reading strategies implemented in English
language learning classroom. Developing learners’ reading abilities and strategies they use in
dealing with the written text, give them information and help them understand not only whats and
hows but also whys delivered in written text. Teachers/students choose the most appropriate
strategies according to their needs, purposes, type of written text, and the choice may vary from
one reader/situation/time/circumstance to another.
- 500 -
8th International Visible Conference on Educational Studies & Applied Linguistics 2017
ISBN 978-0-9962570-7-7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
REFERENCES
Babbitt, P. (2002). Scaffolding: Strategies for Improving Reading Comprehension Skills. Retrieved
October 26, 2014, from Pearson: www.phschool.com/eteach/language_arts/2002_12/essay.html
Bachman, L. F. (1990). Fundamental Considerations in Language Testing (2nd ed.). OUP Oxford
Bachman, L. F., & Palmer, A. S. (2009). Language Testing in Practice: Designing and Developing
Useful Language Tests. Oxford University Press
Blachowicz, C. L., & Ogle, D. (2008). Reading Comprehension: Strategies for Independent Learners
(2nd ed.). New York: Guilford Press.
Brown, H. D. (2001). Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Lanugage Pedagogy (2nd ed.).
New York: Longman.
Connolly, S. (2007). Successful Strategies for Reading in the Content Areas Grades 305. Huntington
Beach: Shell Education
Duffy, G. G. (1993). Rethinking Strategy Instruction: Four Teachers' Development and their Low
Achievers' Understandings. The Elementary School Journal, 93 (3), 231-247
Edge. (2002). Teacher Welcome and Teaching Tips. In E. (EDT), Reading Comprehension Skills and
Strategies (pp. 4-6). Irvine: Saddleback Educational Publications.
Goodman, K. S. (2003). Reading: A Psycholinguistic Guessing Game. In K. S. Goodman, A. D. Flurkey,
& J. Xu, On the Revolution of Reading: The Selected Writings of Kenneth S. Goodman (pp. 46-
56). Pearson Education Canada.
Janzen, J. (2002). Teaching Strategic Reading. In J. C. Richards, & W. A. Renandya, Methodology in
Language Teaching: An Anthology of Current Practice (pp. 287-294). Cambridge University
Press.
McNamara, D. S. (2009). The Importance of Teaching Reading Strategies. Perspectives on Language and
Literacy, 35(2), 34-38.
McNamara, D. S. (2012). Reading Comprehension Strategies: Theories, Inventions, and Technologies.
New Jersey: Psychology Press.
Medina, C. (2007). Introduction. In C. Medina, Successful Strategies for Reading in the Content Areas
(pp. 4-14). Huntington Beach : Shell Educational Publishing.
Mozayan, M. R., Fazilatfar, A. M., Khosravi, A., & Askari, J. (2012, November). The Role of Semantic
Mapping as a While-reading Activity in Improving Reading Comprehension Ability of the
Iranian University Students in General English (GE) Courses. Theory and Practice in Language
Studies, 2(11), 2422-2429.
Roe, B., Smith, S., & Burns, P. C. (2011). Teaching Reading in Today's Elementary Schools (11th ed.).
- 501 -