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Reading and Writing Successfully in College: Rereading

Reading and Writing Successfully in College
Rereading
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Welcome, Students!
  6. Welcome, Instructors!
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Land Acknowledgement
  9. Icons, Textboxes, and Images
  10. Doing Intellectual Work
    1. What Is Intellectual Work?
    2. Understanding Bloom’s Taxonomy
    3. Bloom's and Generative AI
    4. Understanding Writing Assignments as Intellectual Work
    5. Examining Sample Assignment 1: Summary and Analysis
    6. Examining Sample Assignment 2: Position Paper
    7. Examining Sample Assignment 3: Article for a Public Audience
    8. Examining Sample Assignment 4: Reflection
    9. Treating Complex Tasks as Intellectual Work: Why?
  11. Successful College Reading
    1. Why Reading in a College Writing Textbook?
    2. Reading Effectively
    3. Creating an Optimal Setting for Reading
    4. Examining a Sample Assignment
    5. Using Pre-Reading Strategies
    6. Focusing Your Reading
    7. Annotating and Note-Taking
    8. Doing Quick Research
    9. Finding the Main Point
    10. Working Carefully Through Trouble Spots
    11. Rereading
    12. Responding to What You Are Reading
    13. Summarizing and Reflecting on a Text
    14. Reading in College and Elsewhere
  12. Writing Process in College
    1. Why Writing Process in College?
    2. Thinking about Writing Process
    3. Prewriting 1: Understanding the Task
    4. Prewriting 2: Generating Ideas
    5. Drafting 1: Setting Up Your Structure
    6. Drafting 2: Producing Text
    7. Getting Feedback
    8. Revising 1: Revising Globally
    9. Revising 2: Revising Paragraphs
    10. Editing
    11. Proofreading
    12. Owning Your Process
  13. Writing with Sources
    1. How Are Sources Used in College?
    2. Understanding Sources Types
    3. Finding Sources
    4. Evaluating Sources
    5. Summarizing
    6. Paraphrasing
    7. Quoting
    8. Choosing Between Quotations and Paraphrases
    9. Citing Your Sources
    10. Plagiarizing
    11. Integrating Source Material with Your Ideas
    12. Thoughtful Source Use
  14. Glossary
  15. Works Cited
  16. Grant Information
  17. Version History

Rereading

There is plenty of text in the world that we only read once: texts from friends, billboards, magazine or webzine stories, novels we’re reading for fun. But when we are reading to further our learning and to work with the material in the texts, it pays to reread.

Don’t let yourself think that rereading is a deficiency or weakness. Ask your professors. We reread material for our classes, even though we may have taught it for years. Why? Two of the big reasons are (1) to refresh our memory and (2) to review the material in light of what we know now that we didn’t know when we read the text the last time. I regularly notice ideas in a text on a second or third reading that I didn’t notice the first time through.

This doesn’t mean that you will need to reread everything from beginning to end, and if you have taken good notes, you won’t have to. But you should expect that you will need to reread difficult or important sections of a text to confirm your understanding and glean new insight. And you’ll definitely need to reread at least the parts of the texts you are going to write about. For example, in writing this chapter, I have reread Mitchell’s article in whole or in part at least five times. Probably more, but I wasn’t keeping track.

Good readers reread. Professional readers reread. Experts reread. You should reread, too.

Activity: Reflecting on Rereading

In the previous section, I asked you to use some strategies to work carefully through difficult sections. This meant that you almost certainly reread at least some material. But even if you didn’t, try rereading a section now, and answer the following questions:

  • What do you understand better as a result of your rereading?
  • What did you notice during the rereading that you missed before?
  • What, if anything, did you learn from rereading the text?

Key Point: Rereading

  • Reread

Annotate

Next chapter
Responding to What You Are Reading
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College Writing: Guides, Handbooks, and Advice
Reading and Writing Successfully in College: A Guide for Students [Revised Edition] Copyright © 2024 by Patricia Lynne is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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