Student Resources
Getting the Most Out of Your Reading
Before You Start
- Eliminate distractions,
such as interruptions, TV, background music, outside noise,
hunger and thirst.
- Reserve enough time for reading tasks. For many people, reading and studying in small chunks is
more successful than cramming everything into one long
session.
- Decide on information you want to remember. Students
often think they are expected to
retain everything
they read. Wrong. For most courses, you need to learn the
most important information and some of the supporting evidence.
That is, you must distinguish between the most important
and the least important.
- Decide on your preferred information collection
techniques. Plan on how you will record important
information or take notes (computer, highlighting,
pen and note pad, dictate to a tape, etc.). Have a
set of different pens or highlighters on hand.
Plan to reward yourself. Determine small
rewards for completing your reading task.
While You Read
- Highlight important points. If
you are reading online, you may wish to print the pages
offline. These are then useful for highlighting, taking
notes, and reviewing quickly.
- Get an overview of your reading. Look
over the material you’re reading quickly. Scan the
headings and subheadings, look at the graphics, read the
introductions and conclusions, and scan the intro or follow-up
questions. Ask yourself: What am I supposed to be learning
from this material? You may find it helpful to jot down
questions you expect the material will answer.
- Determine the author’s main statement. Pay
attention to the first sentence of each paragraph, which
is often the topic sentence (ie. it contains the paragraph’s
main idea). Search for key concepts within the paragraph.
You may find it helpful to briefly review mentally after
every few paragraphs or pages to be sure you are retaining.
As you read, ask yourself: What is the author’s
main idea (or what is the most important information)?
What evidence is used to support that main idea?
- Be aware of different reading approaches. Different
subjects require different types of reading. In general,
the sciences may need a close, careful reading with exact
recall of detail, whereas literature often requires you
to read a large volume of material in a short period of
time and hence to remember fewer (but important) specifics.
Adjust your reading rate and what you focus on according
to the subject.
- Write down your questions. Write down
questions as prompted by the reading or if something is
not clear to you so that you may ask your instructor and
your classmates on the discussion board.
- Note down citations. If you are gathering
material for a term paper, be sure to include citations
with your notes, in case you decide to use the text in
your paper.
After You Read
- Review your notes. Review the notes
or highlights you made and add or clarify as necessary.
- Discuss your ideas and perspectives with others. You
may want to discuss your readings with a classmate by phone or online. This will help you review what you’ve
learned and may help you clarify what you don’t
understand.
- Reward yourself. Don’t forget
that reward!