When you work with a text, you enter into a conversation with it, responding with your thoughts, ideas, and feelings. The way each of us responds to any text has a lot to do with who we are: our age, education, cultural background, religion, ethnicity, and so forth. As you explore a text, be aware of how you’re responding to it.

Exercises

In-Class Exercise 3.2: Exploring a Text

Use these questions to Annotate the reading. Make notes in your Literacy Journal.

  • Are you reading or exploring easily and fluidly, or are you finding it difficult to navigate the text? Why do you believe this is so?
  • Do you find yourself responding with some sort of strong emotion? If so, why do you think that may be happening?
  • Do formatting or structural issues (examples: unusual use of punctuation, use of dialect or jargon) affect your navigation of the text?
  • Can you identify with the text’s central idea or the information it’s sharing?
  • Have you had any experiences like those being described? Can you identify with the story?
  • Are you able to identify the surface meaning?
  • Have you explored the text’s deeper, hidden messages?
  • Do you need to look up any words to do any quick research? If so, does this help you better understand the text?
  • What questions do you have about the work?

 

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Literacy for College Success Copyright © by donaldwinter and Amee Schmidt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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