Reading Exercise 1

Some Principles of College Reading

Some Principles of College Reading

 

In the first chapter of Writing in the Arts and Sciences*, the authors make the following statement:
The reading and writing [students] do in each course will differ from what [they] do in other courses in more than just subject matter. In [their] earlier years [students] may have assumed that teachers taught different subjects:  in history [students] considered such topics as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln; in science, [students] thought about molecules and chemical compounds.  But subject matter is only the most obvious difference among the courses that [students] take. . . . instructors consider themselves members of different academic disciplines, not just because they study different subject matter, but because they have developed different systems for looking at and organizing experience. In the broadest sense, all courses have the same subject matter—the world—but as [students] study each discipline, [they] will need to look at that subject matter from a slightly different angle.

*Maimon, Elaine P., et alWriting in the Arts and Sciences.

        Cambridge, MA:  Winthrop Publishers, Inc., 1981.

 

Consider the following quotations:

Questions: 

  1. What does each of these statements say about the nature of the act of reading? 
  2. What adjustments do you need to contemplate?

Related Readings:

 

Citation: Harmatiuk, S. (2008, May 14). Reading Exercise 1. Retrieved February 16, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/first-year-of-studies/making-the-academic-adjustment-to-college/reading-exercises/some-principles-of-college-reading.
University of Notre Dame, 2008, by the Contributing Authors. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Creative Commons License