TOEFL READING SKILLS
·
Preparation Strategies
Read, Read, Read. Read in English regularly. Focus on
academic texts from university textbooks or other materials. Do not stick to
one or two topics that you are interested in. Read from variety of subjects -
science, social science, business, arts, geography, history, economics, and
others. Academic texts, apart from textbooks, could be found in variety of
articles and academic publications on the Internet or university libraries.
Find the purpose of the passage. Knowing the purpose of
the reading you may easily find what the writer is trying to accomplish. The
purpose of the passage in most of the readings is embedded in the introductory
paragraph which is one of the most important paragraphs in the text. Most of the
passages in TOEFL iBT will try to do the following:
· To Explain - to present the information on a specific
topic in explanatory manner. These texts contain mostly factual information.
· To Resolve - it aims at finding solution for some sort
of dilemmas or questions that need answers. Usually there would be a debate.
· To convince - to persuade the reader of the validity of
certain viewpoint or idea. There would be opinions and support with evidence in
those type of passages.
A.
Increase vocabulary
When reading wide variety of texts
on different subjects you should make a word list. Organize your list in topics
for better results. Example topics could be business, geography, science and
others. Make flashcards to help you learn those word lists. Use the words learned
in your writings and speaking.
B.
Take notes
During all sections of TOEFL iBT
note taking is allowed. It is a crucial component for success. It is difficult
to remember all facts and details from a reading text in order to answer the
questions. You also don't have enough time to search for those again in the
text. So, the solution is called note taking. When skimming and reading the
texts you should write down all important facts and details in order to find
them fast and easily when you need them. See also our effective note taking
strategies.
C.
Learn how to skim the text
Skimming means reading the text
quickly to obtain very first general impression on what the text is about, what
its main idea is. Skimming corresponds with Reading to find information objective
in TOEFL iBT. You should develop your ability to skim quickly but at the same
time to identify all major points in the passage. Take notes. See also our
skimming strategies.
D.
Read after skimming
Only skimming is not enough. Read
the passage again. This time read it more carefully, but don't forget that you
have limited time. Take notes. Identify the passage type - classification,
cause/effect, compare/contrast, problem/solution, etc.
E.
Try to guess the meaning of
unfamiliar words in the passages
the context can help to do that. After that, check those
words in the dictionary. Guessing the words from the context brings great
advantages - you save time and it doesn't disturb your comprehension of the
texts.
F.
Highlight some of the pronouns (he,
him, they, them, etc.) in the texts.
Identify to which nouns in the
particular text the highlighted pronouns refer.
G.
Practice making general inferences
and conclusions based on what is implied in the text.
H.
Learn to organize the data presented
in the passage in charts and tables.
Create charts with categories and
place the important data from the passage in the appropriate category. In TOEFL
iBT you are not asked to create charts. Rather, charts are provided and you are
asked to categorize the information in pre-defined categories.
·
Improving Reading Skills
- Read as much and as often as possible. Make sure to
include academic texts on a variety of topics written in different genres
as part of your reading.
- Read
major newspapers, such as The New York Times or Science Times.
- Use
the websites of National Public Radio (NPR) or the BBC to get transcripts
of shows and study the content and new vocabulary you encounter.
- Continually expand your vocabulary knowledge.
- Develop
a system for recording unfamiliar words.
- Write each word on a card and mix up the cards each
time you study them. Write the context (the sentence the word was used
in) to help you learn correct word usage.
- Group the words according to topic or meaning and
study the words as a list of related words.
- Review the new words on a regular basis so that you
remember them.
- Increase
your vocabulary by analyzing word parts. Study roots, prefixes, and suffixes.
- Study word families (e.g., enjoyment, enjoy; enjoyable,
enjoyably)
- Use
available vocabulary resources.
- Use a good thesaurus to study various shades of
meanings of words.
- The Longman Language
Activator provides "collocations" (words used
together).
- There are online concordancers that search corpora
and provide examples of words in context, such as the British national
corpus.
- Practice
using context to guess the meaning of unknown words.
- Continually
practice using new words you encounter in your speech and writing. This
will help you remember both the meaning and the correct usage of the
words.
- Think carefully about how ideas are connected within a
text. The connections between sentences and the links between paragraphs
are critical to complete comprehension.
- To
understand the structure of a reading passage, outline the text.
- Begin by determining the main idea or concept presented
in each paragraph. Remember to distinguish between the main points and
the details that exemplify them.
- Group paragraphs that address the same concept. Think
about how the key idea in one paragraph relates to the main point of the
next paragraph. If there are several paragraphs that focus on the same
idea or concept, synthesize the key points into one main idea.
- Write one sentence or phrase summarizing the
paragraphs that discuss the same idea.
- Add important details that support each major idea or
concept.
- Learn
to recognize different organizational styles in order to understand the
way an article is structured.
- Look for the common patterns of organization that you
find in articles.
- Pay attention to connecting words in order to understand the pattern of
organization.
- Write
a summary of a text, making sure that it incorporates the organizational
pattern of the original.
- If the text is a comparison, be sure that your
summary reflects that and uses appropriate transition words and phrases
for comparison.
- If the text argues two points of view, be sure both
points of view are reflected in your summary and that appropriate
transitional words are used.
- Read
major newspapers, such as The New York Times or Science Times.
- Use
the websites of National Public Radio (NPR) or the BBC to get transcripts
of shows and study the content and new vocabulary you encounter.
- Develop
a system for recording unfamiliar words.
- Write each word on a card and mix up the cards each
time you study them. Write the context (the sentence the word was used
in) to help you learn correct word usage.
- Group the words according to topic or meaning and
study the words as a list of related words.
- Review the new words on a regular basis so that you
remember them.
- Increase
your vocabulary by analyzing word parts. Study roots, prefixes, and suffixes.
- Study word families (e.g., enjoyment, enjoy; enjoyable,
enjoyably)
- Use
available vocabulary resources.
- Use a good thesaurus to study various shades of
meanings of words.
- The Longman Language
Activator provides "collocations" (words used
together).
- There are online concordancers that search corpora
and provide examples of words in context, such as the British national
corpus.
- Practice
using context to guess the meaning of unknown words.
- Continually
practice using new words you encounter in your speech and writing. This
will help you remember both the meaning and the correct usage of the
words.
- To
understand the structure of a reading passage, outline the text.
- Begin by determining the main idea or concept presented
in each paragraph. Remember to distinguish between the main points and
the details that exemplify them.
- Group paragraphs that address the same concept. Think
about how the key idea in one paragraph relates to the main point of the
next paragraph. If there are several paragraphs that focus on the same
idea or concept, synthesize the key points into one main idea.
- Write one sentence or phrase summarizing the
paragraphs that discuss the same idea.
- Add important details that support each major idea or
concept.
- Learn
to recognize different organizational styles in order to understand the
way an article is structured.
- Look for the common patterns of organization that you
find in articles.
- Pay attention to connecting words in order to understand the pattern of
organization.
- Write
a summary of a text, making sure that it incorporates the organizational
pattern of the original.
- If the text is a comparison, be sure that your
summary reflects that and uses appropriate transition words and phrases
for comparison.
- If the text argues two points of view, be sure both
points of view are reflected in your summary and that appropriate
transitional words are used.
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