What I Need To Know: Reading and Writing Skills SECOND SEMESTER, Quarter 4, Week 1-3
What I Need To Know: Reading and Writing Skills SECOND SEMESTER, Quarter 4, Week 1-3
What I Need To Know: Reading and Writing Skills SECOND SEMESTER, Quarter 4, Week 1-3
Learning Competency
• Explain critical reading as reasoning (EN11/12RWS-IVac-8)
Objectives By the end of this lesson, you are expected to:
What I Know
Before heading on to our lesson, let us first check what you already know.
Direction: Read the statements carefully, and determine if they are TRUE or
FALSE, then write your answers on the blanks provided before each number.
Direction: Can you think of the similarities and difference between critical reading and
reasoning? Try to fill this Venn Diagram with your ideas.
1. What a text says – restatement (wherein the reader merely restates what is
said in the original text)
2. What a text does – description (wherein the reader discusses aspects of the
discussion itself)
3. What a text means – interpretation (wherein the reader analyzes the meaning
of the text as a whole).
Critical reading does not simply ask what the text says but more of how the topic
is presented and why. Critical readers dwell on the distinctive qualities of the text.
Readers normally read texts to obtain facts and knowledge. A critical reader, on the
other hand, mulls over the unique perspective of the author on a particular text and
how the facts the author presented arrived at his/her conclusion.
Critical reading ultimately examines the author’s choice of content, language and
structure. The basis of recognizing the purpose of an author is their choice of content
and language to use. The critical reader analyzes the tone and persuasive elements of a
text through reviewing the choice of language used. In recognizing the bias of the text,
the critical reader must identify the nature of patterns of choice of content and
language. Critical reading teaches the reader how to not blindly accept all the
presented facts without further examination. This technique allows you to confirm and
present your own argument. The practical starting point of every critical reader is to
question everything you read.
What Is It
Facts versus Opinions
Facts are statements that can be checked or proved. We can check facts by
conducting some sort of experiment, observation or by verifying (checking) the fact
with a source document.
Facts often contain numbers, dates or ages and facts might include specific
information about a person, place or thing.
Clue words for opinion statements are: think, believe, seem, always, never,
most, least, worse, greatest.
The author’s tone, on the other hand, may be evident in his/her choice of words either
expressing its connotation or denotation.
The author uses various persuasive techniques to color the presentation of facts
and to appeal to the reader. Authors use jargons and slanting to make the readers lean
towards their position/argument.
• Purpose/Context – What does the text aim to do? Does it mean to persuade or
does it contribute to a discussion of an existing topic? What content does the
text cover? What purpose does it serve its readers?
• Author/s – Who wrote the text? What are his qualifications for writing about the
topic?
• Audience – What is its target audience? Where is the text found? What does the
author expect the reader to get from his/her composition? Are you a part of the
author’s audience?
• Topic and Position – Is the author’s argument on the topic at hand supported by
valid evidence? Is the author’s position clear? Is it presented as objective? Is
his/her stand based on other author’s position or simply from personal
observation/experience?
• Research/Sources – Do previous researches have a role in supporting the
author’s argument? Which of the references elicits further discussion?
• Proof/Evidence – What are the proofs/evidence presented by the author
throughout the text? Did they come from credible sources? What type of proof is
used by the author (e.g. references to other work, interpretations of other work,
original research, personal experience, author’s opinions, critical analysis, etc.)?
Do these proofs validate the argument? Which of the evidence carries the most
weight?
• Organization – How are the information organized in the text? For what
particular reason are they arranged in this particular way? Where did the author
plainly states his/her stand on the topic? Is the organization driven more by the
content (the information that needs to be presented), by the authors' argument,
by the needs of the audience, or by some combination of the three?
• Style – What can you infer from the author’s choice of words? From what
perspective did the author write the text? Was he/she inclusive with his/her
choice of words? Did they use jargons or slanted meanings? If there are, were
they properly defined for the reader’s convenience and understanding? What
other writing techniques did the author apply in writing the text? Analyze each
sentence structure, figurative language and rhetorical questions existing in the
text.
• Drawing Conclusions – What does the author want to highlight? Compare and
contrast the text with other similar ones. Identify the similarities and differences
in their approach of the same topic.
Making Inferences
• A boy is wearing a Led Zeppelin T-shirt, glasses, and his shoes have mud on
them. One can infer he likes Led Zeppelin, his eyesight is poor and he walked
through mud.
• You adopt a puppy from the shelter and he seems nervous and scared. He hides
from loud noises and had some noticeable scars.
You can infer that he was abused by his former owner.
Remember!
• Critical reading goes beyond recognition of the text’s meaning and restating
it in your own words.
• A critical reader must be able to do the following
a. Distinguish between fact and opinion
b. Identify the author’s purpose
c. Make inferences
d. Recognize the author’s tone
e. Recognize persuasive techniques.
Activity 1
Direction: Let’s try if you can infer where I am and what I am doing, and what can
you infer about the feelings of the people in the situations that I’ll be giving you. The
first one has been done for you.
Example:
I see bubbles rising. I hear my own breathing. There are fish swimming above
me. I feel the seaweed swaying.
Answer: _____________________
3. What can you infer from this?
Rey always carries his guitar with him.
Answer: _____________________
4. What can you infer about Anna’s father?
After Anna broke the vase, her father turned and walked away without saying
anything.
Answer: _____________________
5. What can you infer about the relationship of the speaker and whom she is
speaking to?
If you won’t go, I won’t either.
Answer: _____________________
Assessment
After our lesson, let us now check what you have learned.
Direction: Read the statements carefully, and determine if they are TRUE or
FALSE, then write your answers on the blanks provided before each number.
References
Analyzing a written text.
Retrieved from: https://writing.colostate.edu/guides/teaching/co301aman/pop7b3.c fm
Inference reading.