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The SQ3R Reading Method
Survey!
Question! Read! Recite! Review!
Before you read,
Survey
the chapter:
- the title, headings, and
subheadings
- captions under pictures, charts,
graphs or maps
- review questions or teacher-made
study guides
- introductory and concluding
paragraphs summary
Question
while you are surveying:
- Turn the title, headings, and/or
subheadings into questions;
- Read questions at the end of the
chapters or after each subheading;
- Ask yourself, "What did my
instructor say about this chapter or subject when it was assigned?"
- Ask yourself, "What do I already
know about this subject?"
When you begin to
Read:
- Look for answers to the questions
you first raised;
- Answer questions at the beginning
or end of chapters or study guides
- Reread captions under pictures,
graphs, etc.
- Note all the underlined,
italicized, bold printed words or phrases
- Study graphic aids
- Reduce your speed for difficult
passages
- Stop and reread parts which are
not clear
- Read only a section at a time and
recite after each section
Recite
after you've read a section:
- Orally ask yourself questions
about what you have just read
or summarize, in your own words, what you read
- Take notes from the text but
write the information in your own words
- Underline or highlight important
points you've just read
- 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
Review:
an ongoing process
Day One
- After you have read and recited
the entire chapter,
write questions in the margins for those points you have highlighted or
underlined.
- If you took notes while reciting,
write questions for the notes you have taken in the left hand margins of
your notebook.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Adapted from:
Robinson, Francis Pleasant, (1961, 1970) Effective study (4th ed.),
Harper & Row, New York, NY.
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