Reading Academically
Reading Academically
Reading Academically
Learning Outcomes
1. Identify what reading skills you currently use.
2. Develop your understanding of how to develop critical reading skills .
3. Introduce you to a system (Quasar Method) for greater interactivity with texts and
articles.
4. Develop strategies for monitoring your reading styles.
Contents
1.0 Introduction to the QUASAR method – an explanation of a method to increase
interactivity and develop critical reading skills
1.1 Am I an interactive reader? A self audit of how reading is tackled.
1.2 Characteristics of ‘surface and deep’ approaches to reading
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Reading academically
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1The material in this guide is copyright © 2003 the University of Southampton. Permission is given for it to be
copied for use within the University of Southampton. All other rights are reserved.
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Reading Academically
The key to success is being an ACTIVE reader rather than someone who passively lets
the information flow over them!
If you wish to improve your academic reading skills, you will first need to take stock of
how you go about reading now. This section will introduce a system for improving your
skills, called the QUASAR ATTACK method.
Q Question
U
A (be) Active
S Systems
A Analyse
R Reflect
To find out more and to see if any part of the Quasar Method would help you, you might
like to fill in the questionnaires to find out what skills you already use.
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yes/no
1 I tend to read very little beyond what is actually required to pass the
assignment
4 When I read an article or book, I try to find out exactly what the author
means
5 Often I find myself questioning what I read
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1.2 Characteristics of surface and deep approaches to reading
Can you see the difference between the two approaches?
All students use both approaches at some time. If you understand your subject material
fully you will be able to apply it successfully in your reading approach and your written
work.
• Intention to understand
• Vigorous interaction with content
• Relate new ideas to previous knowledge
• Relate concepts to everyday experience
• Relate evidence to conclusions
• Examine the logic of the argument
If you want to become a ‘deep’ reader or improve these skills you might like to look at
Section 4.O to find out how to improve interactivity with text and Section 5.0 to find out
how to improve your critical reading skills
In this section you will be asked to reflect on how efficient you are when reading and the
degree of interactivity you have with the text you read. You can then find out more about
improving these aspects of your reading by consulting the other sections.
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2.1 Find out if you need to improve your efficiency.
Look at these questions to find out more about the way you tackle background reading,
reading for assignments, reading for literature reviews and reading to increase
knowledge and understanding. Tick those questions to which you answer Yes.
tick
1 Do you read a chapter or journal article from start to finish and have a fuzzy
idea of what was said?
2 Does it take you a long time to do the necessary reading for your
course?
3 Do you find that the chapters or books or articles seem to go above your
head?
5 Do you ‘say’ the words silently to yourself in your head as you read?
If you have ticked four or more of these boxes, you need to improve your
reading efficiency. Go to Section 3.0 Being an efficient reader.
2.2 Find out if you need to improve how you are interacting with text
tick
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4 Do you vary your style of reading depending on the nature of the
task?
If you have ticked four or less of these boxes, you need to be a more
active reader. Go to Section 4.0 Being an Active Reader and/or section
3.0 Being an Efficient Reader.
2.3 Find out if you need to improve your critical reading skills
tick
1 Do you think about what you are reading and question what the author has
written?
5 Are you able to synthesise the key information and make connections
between what one author and others are saying?
8 Can you spot assumptions which have not been well argued?
If you have ticked four or less of these boxes, you need to improve your
critical reading skills. Go to Section 5.0 Critical Reading.
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3.0Efficient Reading
To help you to be more efficient and effective as an academic reader, you might need to
consider one or all of the following:
QUASAR Attack
Q Question
U
A (Be) Active
S Systems
Systems
A Analyse
R Reflect
“ If I read more slowly it will help me to understand difficult concepts and texts which
seem inaccessible because of the way they are written.”
Sometimes reading slowly can impair your understanding. Slow readers are more likely
to miss the point or get bogged down with minute detail.
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Try this piece of software online that can assess your reading speed:
http://www.uvreader.com/test.php
• If you are determined and prepared to practise, then you should be able to train
yourself to read faster and improve your concentration and level of
comprehension.
• Our eyes move, pause and recognise characters. Every time the eye stops it is
called a fixation. (The period in which reading matter is recognised, understood
and stored in memory.) The size and length of the fixation is the important factor.
• The slower reader reads the text word by word. The average reader links together
unimportant words with key words so that there are fewer fixations – this
increases reading speed. The fast reader is the most efficient and reads whole
phrases at a time.
• You can train yourself to read larger chunks of text at each fixation but you will
need to practise this skill.
• Avoid backtracking when reading. Backtracking is when you read a few words
and then go back over them because you have not understood the point properly.
By doing this you are interrupting the flow of reading and confusing your
understanding rather than clarifying it. It is far better to get to the end of a
section by reading it straight through and then re-reading it if necessary. A
difficult section is often better read quickly twice than once slowly!
• Avoid ‘sounding out’ words in your head as you read. This slows you down.
• You need to vary your reading style and speed according to the material you are
reading.
• Remember reading improves with practice, and the more you are familiar with
advanced reading texts the more quickly you will be able to get access to the
information.
• There are some web sites which you can visit which will help you to improve and
increase your reading speed. www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newISS_03.htm
• www.rapidreading.co.uk
Scanning is another style of reading. This is most useful when you are searching for
something specific in the text – like a word or phrase. An example of use is when you are
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looking in a telephone directory for a particular person’s name or when you look in the
index of a book to see which page contains the information you want.
QUASAR Attack
Q Question
U
A (Be) Active
S Systems
A Analyse
R Reflect Analyse Text
You can increase your reading speed and improve your comprehension by being familiar
with the way text is written for your subject. This is called ‘genre’ or the style of the text.
You might also examine how the text is organized; and how the author has analysed
(broken down) the material in order to set up an argument. Be aware that different
disciplines (e.g., sociology, philosophy, psychology, neurology etc.) will have different
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ways of arguing so the text may be set out in a different format and adhere to different
‘conventions’.
Here are some things for you to think about when examining text to find your way
around more efficiently. Finding the answers to the above points will mean that you
have to examine the way text is put together for your subject, and this will help with
comprehension and speed of access to information.
• Where are chapter summaries usually found – at the beginning or the end of a
chapter?
• Does each section contain a summary statement at the beginning or the end?
• Does the text rely upon fairly simple or complex sentences? (If the latter you will
need to practise un-picking these to make sense of them quickly).
QUASAR Attack
Q Question
U
A (Be) Active Question & Analyse
S Systems Text
A Analyse
R Reflect
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of the elements of successful reading is the knack of matching your level of
understanding with the relevant resources for the activity in which you are involved.
Some students become disheartened when they cannot understand a text on the ‘book
list’. This may be because you are still grappling at an early stage of understanding, both
of the new concepts and the new terminology. Some books are, therefore, at too high a
level at this stage and are more like reading a second language where you have to look
up all the new terminology to help you link the vocabulary with the meaning! If this
applies to you, you should begin with a text which gives you more help and briefer, more
broad-stroke, explanations. If the subject is new to you, the Idiot’s Guides on the market
are a ‘must’! However, there may be some excellent ‘A’ level text books which serve this
purpose as a bridge to exploring more complex journal articles, for example. It is
important that you seek advice from your departments, tutors, post-graduate students
about what is available.
Remember the books or chapters or articles have not been written especially so that you
can answer the question posed by your tutor. They may go into a lot of complicated
depth which is not relevant to your current needs. (See Section 4.0 Being an Active
Reader)
Active Reading
It is very important to be an ACTIVE reader as this will help you retain information in a
text and help you make the right kind of notes – it is essentially reading for a purpose
rather than just browsing.
QUASAR Attack
Q Question
U
A (Be) Active
S Systems Question & (Be ) ACTIVE
A Analyse
R Reflect
Have you ever considered doing things to ensure that your reading is effective and that
you become more efficient in the process?
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BEFORE READING Ask yourself some questions.
Before you launch into reading a chapter or section or journal article, you may need to
ask yourself to Preview and Predict. Do this by asking yourself the following:
When you start to read you should be asking yourself what type of information you
need/want. This can fall into three categories: Literal, Inferential or Critical.
Literal For example:-
o Who was responsible for making Laws?
Inferential For example:-
o Can you find evidence in your reading that a specific Law is effective?
o What do different people say? Whose arguments are stronger?
Critical For example:-
o Has the author given enough evidence to be convincing? (think of your
own reading of a topic)
o Are the results reliable and valid?
o Is the author’s interpretation sound?
Many students find that it is useful to colour code information. To do this most
effectively you will need to photocopy sections of text which you think are most relevant
and crucial to your work. As you are reading you will have to make decisions about what
sort of information it is in order to code it. This means that you will be interacting more
with the text rather than being a surface reader.
Decisions about colour coding can only be made effectively if you know your purpose for
reading and what it is that you are looking for. For example, you may want to code the
main ideas in one colour in a section or paragraph and the evidence or examples or
subsidiary information in another colour.
• You may want to pick out key references and names and use codes to categorise
these.
• Some students find that they like to code the author’s opinions in one colour and
the inferred information in another.
• As you can see there are many ways in which you can be creative to make you
question what you are reading and to help you make more effective notes.
You will need a range of coloured highlighters and photocopies of the texts.
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Ask yourself why you are reading the text and what you want to get out of it
so that you read with a specific focus. Your comprehension improves if your
mind is actively searching for answers to questions.
READ
Read carefully, breaking up your reading into small sections, looking for main
ideas.
RECALL
Mentally go through the ideas you have just read and pick out the main
points. Check that you can answer your initial questions. Check that you have
assimilated and gathered the information you need.
REVIEW
Look back to see if the passage has answered everything you wanted. How
much can you remember?
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Getting Started - Ask yourself the following:
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Do you think it could have been done differently or differently supported?
Can you spot any gaps, un-argued assumptions or inconsistencies?
Look at the conclusions and ask yourself if the evidence supports the conclusions.
Active Reading
The QUASAR Method will help you do this. How will you take the QUASAR method
forward?
Current style
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