1 / 15

The IELTS Academic Reading Module

The IELTS Academic Reading Module. Background information Question types Skills Challenges Helping Ss prepare Questions?. An overview of the IELTS Academic Reading Module. Format 3 passages and 40 items (questions), each worth one mark

ave
Télécharger la présentation

The IELTS Academic Reading Module

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The IELTS Academic Reading Module • Background information • Question types • Skills • Challenges • Helping Ss prepare • Questions?

  2. An overview of the IELTS Academic Reading Module • Format3 passages and 40 items (questions), each worth one mark • Timing60 minutes: no time given for transferring answers to answer sheet • Textsbased on authentic texts including magazines, journals, books and newspapers aim to represent material encountered in academic study may include diagrams, graphs, illustrations etc • Length total word count for three passages: 2000 - 2750 words.

  3. Question types • Multiple Choice • Short-answer questions • Sentence Completion • Notes, Summary or Table/Flow-chart Completion • Labelling a Diagram

  4. Question Types, cont. • Choosing Headings for Paragraphs or Sections of a Text • Locating Information • Identification of Writer’s Views/Claims or of Information in a Text • Classification • Matching Source: http://www.cambridgeesol.org/teach/ielts/academic_reading/index.htm

  5. Weir & Khalifa: a cognitive processing approach to defining reading comprehension “Bottom up” and “Top down” • Goal setter: identifies PURPOSE for reading, e.g. reading for gist-> strategies employed • Knowledge of the language, of the world, and of text structure Both are utilized in the… • Central processing core: L1 reading behaviors that the L2 reader is moving toward, from word recognition to the construction of a mental model of the text and creating “an organised representation of the text” Weir, C. & Khalifa, H. (2008). A cognitive processing approach towards defining reading comprehension

  6. Reading types: easy to difficult. • Scanning/searching for local information • Careful local reading • Skimming for gist • Careful global reading for comprehending main idea • Search reading for global information • Careful global reading to comprehend a text • Careful global reading to comprehend texts Weir, C. & Khalifa, H. (2008). A cognitive processing approach towards defining reading comprehension, p. 9. EASY DIFFICULT

  7. Skills tested The candidate is required to • identify the writer’s overall purpose, target audience, sources etc. • identify and follow key arguments in a text • identify opinions and attitudes as opposed to facts • locate specific information • read for detailed information • extract relevant information • distinguish the main idea from supporting detail

  8. Skills tested, cont. • recognise key points for a summary • group pieces of information in a text in accordance with salient criteria • extract information from a prose text to put into a diagrammatic representation • make inferences • use correct spelling and correct grammar in answers Source: IELTS Teaching Resources, available at http://www.cambridgeesol.org/teach/ielts/ academic_reading/aboutthepaper/academic_read_skills_strats.htm

  9. Challenges for candidates Metacognitive skills and strategies • Fluency/speed • Application of background knowledge content

  10. Challenge for the instructor

  11. Washback ? washback: measurement-driven instruction Chen and Curtis

  12. Or symbiosis? Using IELTS to practice academic reading • Pair work • Synonym matching • Annotation • Discourse analysis • Ss write test materials

  13. A sample of academic reading activities • Vocabulary tasks • Summary writing • Interpreting charts and graphs • Writing test materials • Comparing texts • Critical reading • Reading for research: annotated bibliography

  14. References Baker, A. & Brown, L. (1986). Metacognitive skills and reading. In P. Pearson, (ed.), Handbook of reading research, 353-394, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ. Cheng, L. & Curtis, A. (2004), Washback or backwash: A review of the impact of testing on teaching and learning , in L. Cheng, Y. Watanabe, & A. Curtis. (eds.), Washback in language testing: Research contexts and methods, 3–18 Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ. Grabe, W. (n.d.). Foundations for reading assessment. Retrieved 7 May 2009 from http://testingforum.hau.gr/docs/W.Grabehandout-OK.pdf IELTS Teaching Resources IELTS Teaching Resources (n.d.). Retrieved March 10, 2008 at http://www.cambridgeesol.org/teach/ielts/ academic_reading/aboutthepaper/academic_read_skills_strats.htm Nation, P. (2001). Vocabulary learning strategies and guessing from context. In P. Nation, Learning vocabulary in another language, 217-262. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Weir, C. & Khalifa, H. (2008). A cognitive processing approach towards defining reading comprehension. Cambridge ESOL: Research Notes, 31, 2-10. Retrieved 7 May 2009 from http://www.cambridgeesol.org/rs_notes/rs_nts31.pdf

  15. Useful websites for IELTS Reading • The British Council • Holmesglen Institute IELTS Reading Practice • City University of Hong Kong • Cambridge ESOL • Polytechnic University of Hong Kong

More Related