The basic
unit of thought
Perhaps
one of the best ways to improve your reading ability is to learn to read
paragraphs effectively. Many experts believe the paragraph, not the sentence,
is the basic unit of thought of a selection. If one can quickly grasp the
meaning of each of these though units while reading, then comprehension will be
heightened.
It
is important to identify with the author's perspective by discovering the way
the message is being sent. Every writer has a purpose for writing and some plan
of action for getting a message across. This plan of action is the order in
which the material will be presented in the text. This order, often called a
pattern of organization, should be present in acceptable writing from the
smallest to the largest unit of writing: the paragraph, groups of paragraphs,
sub-chapters, chapters, groups of chapters, whole books, and even series of
books. Each of these, then, contains a certain pattern of organization.
Anticipating
the order in which the material will be presented helps you put the facts into
perspective and to see how the parts fit into the whole. For example, if the
selection begins by indicating that there are four important components of
management, you are alert to look for four key phrases to mark and remember. Likewise,
if a comparison is suggested, you want to note the points that are similar in
nature. For material that shows cause and effect, you need to anticipate the
linkage and note the relationship.
The
importance of these patterns is that they signal how the facts will be
presented. They are blueprints for you to use.
In
textbook reading the number of details can be overwhelming. The mind responds
to logical patterns; relating the small parts to the whole simplifies
complexities of the material and makes remembering easier.
Although
key signal words help in identifying the particular type of pattern, a
single paragraph can be a mixture of different patterns. Your aim is to
anticipate the overall pattern and then place the facts into a broad
perspective.
The
following six examples are the patterns of organization that are most
frequently found in textbooks.
Simple Listing
Items
are randomly listed in a series of supporting facts or details. These
supporting elements are of equal value, and the order in which they are
presented is of no importance. Changing the order of the items does not change
the meaning of the paragraph.
Signal words often used for simple listing are:
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Description
Description
is like listing; the characters that make up a description are no more than a
simple listing of details.
Definition
Frequently
in textbook reading an entire paragraph is devoted to defining a complex term
or idea. The concept is initially defined and then further expanded with
examples and restatements.
Signal words often used for definition are:
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Chronological (Time) Order or Sequence
Items
are listed in the order in which they occurred or in a specifically planned
order in which they must develop. In this case, the order is important and
changing it would change the meaning.
Signal words often used for chronological order or sequence
are:
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Comparison - Contrast
Items
are related by the comparisons (similarities) that are made or by the contrasts
(differences) that are presented. The author's purpose is to show similarities
and differences.
Signal words often used for comparison-contrast are:
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Cause and Effect
In this pattern, one item is showed as having
produced another element. An event (effect) is said to have happened because of
some situation or circumstance (cause). The cause (the action) stimulates the
event, or effect (the outcome).
Signal words often used
for cause and effect are:
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