Critical Reading Strategies-1
Critical Reading Strategies-1
Critical Reading Strategies-1
These seven critical reading strategies can be learned readily and then
applied not only to reading selections in a Literature class, but also to your other
college reading. Mastering these strategies will help you handle difficult material
with confidence.
Summarizing begins with outlining, but instead of merely listing the main
ideas, a summary recomposes them to form a new text. Whereas outlining
depends on a close analysis of each paragraph, summarizing also
requires creative synthesis. Putting ideas together again -- in your own
words and in a condensed form -- shows how reading critically can lead to
deeper understanding of any text.
Evaluating an argument means testing the logic of a text as well as its
credibility and emotional impact. All writers make assertions that want you
to accept as true.
o As a critical reader, you should not accept anything on face value
but to recognize every assertion as an argument that must be
carefully evaluated.
o An argument has two essential parts: a claim and support.
o The claim asserts a conclusion -- an idea, an opinion, a judgment,
or a point of view - that the writer wants you to accept.
o The support includes reasons (shared beliefs, assumptions, and
values) and evidence (facts, examples, statistics, and authorities)
that give readers the basis for accepting the conclusion.
o When you assess an argument, you are concerned with the
process of reasoning as well as its truthfulness (these are not the
same thing).
o At the most basic level, in order for an argument to be acceptable,
the support must be appropriate to the claim and the statements
must be consistent with one another.
Many of the authors on the subject of thinking critically approach the topic in
different ways. Fitting a text into an ongoing dialectic helps increase
understanding of why an author approached a particular issue or question in the
way he or she did.
Historians typically interweave statements of fact, inferences they derive from the
facts, and statements of their own opinion into a seamless historical narrative.
Critical thinkers must be able to distinguish among these three types of
communication.
"Critical Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts" by Peter A. Facione, Dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences, Santa Clara University.
"Critical Thinking Core Concepts" also includes writing tips for prose and using
and criticizing analogies in premises.