4. READING APPROACHES.
“A series of stages that
proceed in a fixed order
from sensory input to
comprehension”
BOTTOM - UP
INTERACTIVE VIEW Combination of
both.
TOP - DOWN
“Continuum process of
changing hypothesis about
the incoming information”
5. TOP - DOWN
Prior
knowledge
Purpose
for reading
But … HOW
Writing
conventions
Interpretation/
Understanding
BOTTOM - UP
Language
knowledge
Reading
strategies
6. Is this text about
advantages or
disadvantages?
Television viewers gradually become
passive in their action. Television may
be a splendid media of
communication, but it prevents us from
communicating with each other or with
the outer world. The world seen
through television is only the restricted
one: It separates us from the real
world.
The reader of this text must be able to
recognize some of the key words and
their exact meanings in order to
understand the point being made by the
author. ( passive, communication,
restricted)
http://www.studymode.com/essays/Advantages-And-
Disadvantages-Of-Tv-199809.html
7. WRITING AS COMMUNICATION
Writing Reader
Decontextualized Distant
Production Receptor
Time Place
Writing
Speaking
Considers and
accommodates an
absent reading
audience to his or
her ideas
Reads and
comprehends
8. The Reader based
Approach
to Writing
Developed by Bereiter and Scardamalia in 1987.
Views writing as aiming to produce a text that can be read successfully.
The writer has the responsibility of creating a text that accommodates to the
potential reader.
The writer has to be fully “committed both to the content and to the form of the
written text.
The writer must develop evaluation and reformulation strategies in the writing process.
9. WRITING FOR A READER-MATCHING
THE WRITER’S AND READER’S SCHEMATA
The Reader
Consideration
Process involves
The reader (the audience) and his/ her needs
Background Knowledge
Potential content schemata
USE
Being Sensitive to...
ELABORATION SKILLS
TO CREATE A COMPREHENSIBLE
AND
COMMUNICATIVE TEXT
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THE INTERACTIONIST APPROACH TO WRITING
Reader and Writer develop a deeper
understanding of the process through
shared experience with various texts
Intertextuality
Cycle of Activities
A preparatory stage
A first draft
Evaluative dialogues
A rewriting of the text
An editing process
11. THE COMPOSING PROCESS
Berlin’s
Model
Grice’s
Maxims
Writer (Knower)
The Audience (Reader)
Reality
Language of a written
text
Top Down
Bottom up
Quantity
Quality
Relevance
Manner
Top Down
Bottom up
22. Global Processing Difficulties
● Mismatch between the reader´s view of
the world and the view presented in
the text.
● A reader who approaches the text with
preconceived expectations might
misread the message.
● A reader who may not understand
some of the key words.
23. Where did the text
appear and what do
we know about the
book where it
appeared?
Who is the author and what do we
know about him/her ?
When was the article or text
published and what were the issues
of concern at that time ?
Teachers can help students
to recognize some of the
features related to the
interaction between global
coherence and local
coherence by asking these
questions.
Strategies that combine top-down
processing with
scanning the text for key
sentences can help the
reader construct the overall
coherence of the text.
?
?
24. Grammatical
Features that
cause
Reading
Difficulties
NOUN
PHRASE
ADJECTIVAL
CLAUSES
A Noun Phrase may be due to a multiple
modifiers, relative clauses with deleted relative
pronouns and compound modifier in
prenominal position.
The complexity of the resulting
structure may cause readers
difficulties recognizing the head
noun,affecting the processing of the
text.
Adjectival Clause with deleted subjects
may interfere with the identification of
the modifier and the head.
The grammatical form of the participles
may mislead readers into thinking that
such a construction is a verb phrase.
25. On one hand, Linguistic
competence is necessary in
order for a reader to
successfully recognize the
internal connections within the
text and be able to relate old to
new information.
On the other hand, General
knowledge of the world is
necessary to connect one´s
background to the ideas
presented in a written text.
30. Use of Tense and Aspect Markers
Intersentential
Cohesion
Simple Past Tense
Historical Present Variant
Progressive
Aspect
► Main Events
► Main Actions
► To set the scene within
which the main event is about
to occur.
31. Simple Past Vs. Past Progressive
When I walked into the office, several people were busily typing, some
were talking on the phones, the boss was yelling directions, and customers
were waiting to be helped. One customer was yelling at a secretary and
waving his hands. Others were complaining to each other about the bad
service.
Historical Present
At the end of the story, Luke becomes a Jedi and defeats Darth Vader.
32. Lexical Accessibility
The readers combine:
Personal Knowledge + Textual Information
to guess the meaning of unfamiliar words,
only when the context provides them with immediate clues for guessing.
33. The optimal level of textual support should be derived from:
1) The reader´s general schemata or general knowledge structures extending
beyond the text.
2) The reader´s familiarity with the overall context of the text.
3) Semantic information provided in the paragraph within which the lexical item
appears.
4) Semantic information in the same sentence.
5) Structural constraints in the sentence.
35. Reading goals
Discourse-based approach
○ Maximize Independent Reading
○ Facilitate Negotiated Interaction
○ Foster Metacognitive Awareness and Learner
Autonomy
○ Expand Access to New Content Areas
36. Planning a Reading Course.
Effective Reading Strategies.
○ Silent reading in guided situations
○ Shared reading in groups
○ Individual reading inside and outside the
classroom
38. Goals /Metacognitive
awareness
Helps readers make decisions and choices
before ,during and after their reading of the
text.
Expose the learner to a variety of texts
genres,content areas, and styles of writing.
The learner can develop the knowledge
component and the processing skills.
39. Reading Activities that Lead to the
Development of strategic reading
Components For reading
effectively.
▪ Language
Knowledge(vocabulary-syntax).
▪ Discourse Knowledge and
Sociocultural Knowledge.
▪ General (prior) Knowledge
or The Knowledge of the
world.
Special Activities need to be
developed.
▪ Multipurpose reading
matter.
▪ Selection of reading
passages,stories,articles.
▪ Motivate reading
▪ Dictionary Skills and
vocabulary work.
▪ Text organization, of
grammatical and logical
connectors.
40. Strategies
○ Pre Writing a text.
○ Making Predictions
○ Focus on external and internal features of a
text.
41. Younger Learners Reading
Activities Focus on:
○ The Purpose of Reading
○ The Development of Reading
Strategies
○ Gaining Information and
Knowledge