The Reading Process
The Reading Process
Reading is one strand of literacy. The reading process is complex and multi-
dimensional. Effective teachers have an understanding of this complexity and are able
to use a range of teaching approaches that produce confident and independent readers.
Recent work by international researchers identified a number of components that need
to be considered in the teaching of reading towards recognizing this complexity.
The following presents what renowned figures have to say about the complexity
of the reading process. Examine them carefully and figure out what they have in
common.
1. “Reading make the full man, conference a ready man, an writing an exact
man.” – Francis Bacon
2. “Reading, after a certain age, diverts the mind too much from its creative
pursuits. Any man who reads too much and uses his brain too little falls
into lazy habits of thinking.” – Albert Einstein
7. Literacy practices are almost always fully integrated with, interwoven into,
constituted as part of, the very texture of wider practices that involve talk,
interactions, values, and beliefs. James Gee in Social Linguistics and
Literacies (1999)
Previous researches have shown that reading is more than recognizing printed
letters or words and that it is also a very complex process that requires careful attention.
Through the years, more relevant views on reading emerge giving us a better picture of
what it really is and how it happens. The following condenses the views forwarded by
experts recognized for their effort of unlocking the mysteries behind the reading
process. These will guide you through as you further hone your ability to read and to
fully understand the reading process.
1. National Reading Panel (2002)
Reading is a complex system of deriving meaning from print that requires
all of the following:
(1) the skills and knowledge to the understand how phonemes, or speech
sounds, are connected to print,
(2) the ability to decode unfamiliar words,
(3) the ability to read fluently,
(4) sufficient background information or schema and vocabulary to foster
reading comprehension,
(5) the development of appropriate active strategies to derive meaning from
print, and
(6) the development and maintenance of a motivation to read.
2. Robert Ruddell, Matha Rapp Ruddell, and Harry Singer
Reading is
(1) going beyond merely decoding the symbols on the page,
(2) thought of as making meaning,
(3) an understanding of what the writer is saying,
(4) an interaction between the reader and the writer in a specific context,
(5) involved with predicting and verifying predictions,
(6) influenced by one’s purpose for reading,
(7) influenced by other factors that involve knowledge, distractions, and
what one does when he/she is reading,
(8) indicative that the amount of information that is known about something
one is reading prior to reading is directly proportionate to how easy or hard
it is to read.
3. Nell Duke and David Pearson
Good readers
(1) are active readers,
(2) have clear goals in mind for their reading,
(3) constantly evaluate whether the text, and their reading of it, is meeting
their goals,
(4) preview a text,
(5) make predictions,
(6) construct, revise, and question the meanings they make as they read,
(7) determine the meaning of unfamiliar words and concepts in the text,
and they deal with inconsistencies or gaps as needed,
The National Reading Panel (2002) suggests that the study to read requires proficiency
in a number of language domains. These language domains include:
Phonemic The ability to distinguish and manipulate the individual sounds
Awareness of language
Phonics The understating of how letters are linked to sounds
(phonemes), patters of letter-sound correspondences and
spelling in English, and how to apply this knowledge when
readers read
Fluency The ability to read orally with speed, accuracy, and vocal
expression; Fluency is important because it provides a bridge
between word recognition and comprehension. Fluent readers
do not have to concentrate on decoding so they can focus their
efforts on making meaning of the text.
Vocabulary The knowledge of words etymology, structure, part of speech
and what they mean; is a large category that includes listening
vocabulary, speaking vocabulary, reading vocabulary, and
writing vocabulary; can be learned indirectly (e.g., through
being read to, through conversations with adult) or directly (e.g.,
through specific word instruction or through strategies such as
breaking longer words down into familiar parts).
Reading The complex cognitive process in which a reader intentinally
Comprehensio and interactively engages with the text; the process of making
n sense of what is being read