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Survey!
Question! Read! Recite!
Review!
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Before you
read, Survey
the chapter:
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the
title, headings, and
subheadings
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captions
under pictures, charts,
graphs or maps
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review
questions or teacher-made
study guides
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introductory
and concluding paragraphs
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summary
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Question
while you are surveying:
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Turn the
title, headings, and/or
subheadings into
questions;
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Read
questions at the end of
the chapters or after
each subheading;
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Ask
yourself, "What did
my instructor say about
this chapter or subject
when it was
assigned?"
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Ask
yourself, "What do I
already know about this
subject?"
Note:
If it is helpful to you,
write out these questions for
consideration. This
variation is called SQW3R
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When you
begin to
Read:
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Look for
answers to the questions
you first raised;
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Answer
questions at the
beginning or end of
chapters or study guides
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Reread
captions under pictures,
graphs, etc.
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Note all
the underlined,
italicized, bold printed
words or phrases
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Study
graphic aids
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Reduce
your speed for difficult
passages
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Stop and
reread parts which are
not clear
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Read only
a section at a time and
recite after each section
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Recite
after you've read a section:
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Orally
ask yourself questions
about what you have just
read and/or summarize, in
your own words, what you
read
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Take
notes from the text but
write the information in
your own words
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Underline/highlight
important points you've
just read
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Use the
method of recitation
which best suits your
particular learning style
but remember, the more
senses you use the more
likely you are to
remember what you read -
i.e.,
TRIPLE
STRENGTH LEARNING:
Seeing, saying, hearing-
QUADRUPLE STRENGTH
LEARNING: Seeing , saying
, hearing, writing!!!
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Review:
an ongoing process.
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Day One
After you have read and
recited the entire
chapter, write questions
for those points you have
highlighted/underlined in
the margins. If your
method of recitation
included note-taking in
the left hand margins of
your notebook, write
questions for the notes
you have taken.
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Day Two
Page through the text
and/or your notebook to
re-acquaint yourself with
the important points.
Cover the right hand
column of your
text/note-book and orally
ask yourself the
questions in the left
hand margins. Orally
recite or write the
answers from memory. Make
"flash cards"
for those questions which
give you difficulty.
Develop mnemonic devices
for material which need
to be memorized.
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Days
Three, Four and Five
Alternate between your
flash cards and notes and
test yourself (orally or
in writing) on the
questions you formulated.
Make additional flash
cards if necessary.
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Weekend
Using the text and
notebook, make a Table of
Contents - list all the
topics and sub-topics you
need to know from the
chapter. From the Table
of Contents, make a Study
Sheet/ Spatial Map.
Recite the information
orally and in your own
words as you put the
Study Sheet/Map together.
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Now that
you have consolidated all
the information you need
for that chapter,
periodically review the
Sheet/Map so that at test
time you will not have to
cram.
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See also: Surveying
text books: "Read
more efficiently with Generation.Uz"
http://www.generation.uz/study/reading.htm
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(please specify which page)
The Study Guides and Strategies web site was created and is
maintained by Joe
Landsberger,
academic web site developer at the University
of St. Thomas (UST), St. Paul, Minnesota. It is collaboratively
maintained across institutional and national boundaries, and last revised
September 04, 2002 .
Permission is granted to freely copy, adapt, print,
transmit, and distribute
Study Guides in settings that benefit learners. On the WWW, however, please link
rather than put up your own page since pages are frequently modified and
improved in consideration of educational research. No request to link is
necessary. Additional contributions and translations are warmly
received.
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