Reading is skill we use daily. We read our clocks and watches, menus for meals, the daily news, novels, magazines, television advertisements, and more. For each of these tasks, we apply different reading skills and strategies.
In college, reading is content-focused; you need to understand the big picture presented in textbooks or scholarly articles along with individual words.
Reading strategies are writing strategies and vice versa. Here we offer a few strategies to help you out, but there are many other ways to engage with the texts you read and write about. Reach out to a Writing Center professor or writing tutor for more ideas.
Previewing a text allows you, the reader, to grasp the basic concepts that will be covered in a text. This contextual knowledge of what you are about to read will help you begin to make connections to knowledge you’ve already gained, and it will prepare you to learn more.
One strategy for improving your comprehension is making connections. There are three types of connections you can make.