Учебное пособие предназначено для студентов высших учебных заведений, обучающихся по образовательной программе



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The first type of speed is study speed (200-300 words per minute). This is the 
slowest speed, used for reading textbooks and difficult materials such as legal 
document, when the reader desires a high rate of understanding. (80% - 90% 
comprehension) as well as good retention. In this type of reading the reader studies 
the material carefully in order not to miss a single point. 
The second type of speed is average reading speed (250-500 wpm.) This is the 
speed that educated native speakers use to read everyday materials such as 
newspapers, magazines, novels, and stories. At this speed the rate of comprehension 
is lowered (usually about 70%). They sometimes even skip over paragraphs or pages 
that don’t interest them. 
The third type of speed is skimming speed. This is the fastest speed that native 
speakers use, when they wish to cover the material in hurry and high comprehension 
is not required. Generally speaking the skimming speed is at least twice as fast as the 
average reading speed (800 wpm), comprehension 50%. So we can see that speed and 
comprehension are inseparable in efficient reading. An efficient reader can not only 
read slowly with good comprehension, but can do also fast with needed 
comprehension when circumstances require. Experimental evidence has shown that a 
poor reader is typically one who reads everything at the same slow speed and does 
not get much meaning from reading. 
Therefore, the major objective of EFL reading is to improve the average and 
skimming speeds of the students and to help them develop the ability to vary their 
speed in reading different materials for different purposes. 
4. Teaching efficient EFL reading. Techniques of reading. 
An effective way to teach EFL reading 
“Improving the reading skill of any student begins with identifying his 
weaknesses, and then implementing appropriate methods for strengthening these 
skills.” So the first thing for the teacher of EFL reading to do is to find out the 
weaknesses or problems of the students. Usually students have five major reading 
problems: 
1. Reading word by word, relying too heavily on the visual information, which 
greatly impedes their reading speed and hampers their comprehension. 
2. Focusing too much attention on form at the expense of meaning. 
3. Paying too much attention to the details, with the request that they often miss 
the main ideas and see only the trees instead of forest. 


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4. A small reading vocabulary and heavy reliance on the use of a dictionary for 
word meaning. 
5. Limited background knowledge. 
It is obvious that some of these problems result from the intensive reading, 
which emphasizes intensiveness and accuracy. Students analyse words, phrases and 
sentences before tackling the meaning. This slow word by word meaning does not 
mean efficient reading and by concentrating on every word they delay the 
transmission of information from their short-term memory to their long-term 
memory, which results in poor comprehension. 
The task before the teacher is to help the students change their reading habits by 
teaching them efficient reading skills. An effective use to do this is through guided 
reading. The term guided reading refers to timed reading conducted in class under the 
guidance of the teacher. In guided reading students can learn how to read in different 
ways at different speeds for different purposes. The teacher can also observe how the 
students actually read and can give them prompt help by correcting reading habits. 
How to teach some of the skills through guided reading. 
1. Word-attack skills.These skills enable the reader to work out the meaning of 
unfamiliar words and phrases without looking them up in the dictionary. There are 
two useful word-attack skills. 
- Using context clues: this includes using the meanings of other words such as 
synonyms and antonyms in the same sentence of paragraph, or the meaning of the 
sentence or paragraph as a whole, to deduce the possible meaning of unfamiliar 
words and phrases. For example: The Indians cut their canoes out of tree trunks by 
using an adʒe (an instrument for cutting something like an axe). 
- Using structural information: this refers to word-formation. Analysis of the 
stems and affixes of words can help students get the meaning of many unfamiliar 
words. 


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