Reading for Study
Reading for Study
There is a great deal, potentially, to read at university, and generally not much guidance about what and how much you read. It is Important to develop active reading skills to help you be selective and critical about your reading.
Key points
Reading lists are a guide - practice finding and using texts for different purposes
You can’t read everything in detail – develop skimming and scanning skills to get a quick overview of a text
Check out your subject section in the library – familiarise yourself with range of texts, types, where information is stored – and explore library database.
Be selective – why should I read this? How would I use it?
Useful questions to help your reading decisions
Why am I reading this? On reading list? Looks useful?
What would I use it for? Background? Key information? Latest essay?
Is it straightforward or difficult? Should I read it later?
What’s the best way to read it? Skim? In detail? Scan index?
Should I take notes? What kind? What do I need?
Shall I come back to it? Take details and read/use later in course?
SQ3R: Five steps to effective reading when you want to read in-depth
Skim and scan
Scan text quickly to get an overall impression. Look at it quickly: notice headings, key words, images, pictures. Get an overall impression. Flick backwards and forwards; glance at first sentence of each paragraph.
Question
Make up questions to help engage: Who? What? Why? When? How?
Read
If you want to, read the text more carefully. Try to read in a relaxed way – don’t worry about difficult words or ideas. Have breaks- read in short bursts.
Recall
Look up, check you have an ‘overview’. What’s it about? Key issues?
Review
Read carefully again, taking brief notes, paragraph by paragraph. N. B. Make a note of key details for your reference list/bibliography.