why it is good for our students… and for us ???
In
this, the first of two articles for TeachingEnglish, Alan Maley considers the
benefits extensive reading can bring to English language learners and teachers.
What is Extensive Reading (ER)?
Extensive
Reading is often referred to but it is worth checking on what it actually
involves. Richard Day has provided a list of key characteristics of ER
(Day 2002). This is complemented by Philip Prowse (2002). Maley (2008) deals
with ER comprehensively. The following is a digest of the two lists of factors
or principles for successful ER:
- Students read a lot and read often.
- There is a wide variety of text types and topics to choose from.
- The texts are not just interesting: they are engaging/ compelling.
- Students choose what to read.
- Reading purposes focus on: pleasure, information and general understanding.
- Reading is its own reward.
- There are no tests, no exercises, no questions and no dictionaries.
- Materials are within the language competence of the students.
- Reading is individual, and silent.
- Speed is faster, not deliberate and slow.
- The teacher explains the goals and procedures clearly, then monitors and guides the students.
- The teacher is a role model…a reader, who participates along with the students.
The model is
very much like that for L1 reading proposed by Atwell (2006). It has been
variously described as Free Voluntary Reading (FEVER),
Uninterrupted
Silent Reading (USR), Sustained Silent Reading (SSR), Drop Everything and Read
(DEAR), or Positive Outcomes While Enjoying Reading (POWER).
So
what are the benefits of ER?
Both common
sense observation and copious research evidence bear out the many benefits
which come from ER (Waring 2000, 2006). There are useful summaries of the
evidence in Day and Bamford (1998: 32-39) and The Special Issue of The
Language Teacher (1997) including articles by Paul Nation and others, and passionate
advocacy in Krashen’s The Power of Reading. (2004). The journals Reading in a
Foreign Language and the International Journal of Foreign Language Learning are
also good sources of research studies supporting ER. (see references for
websites) And there is the indispensable annotated bibliography, http://www.extensivereading.net/er/biblio2.html
So what does
it all add up to?
ER
develops learner autonomy.
There is no
cheaper or more effective way to develop learner autonomy. Reading is, by
its very nature, a private, individual activity. It can be done anywhere, at
any time of day. Readers can start and stop at will, and read at the speed they
are comfortable with. They can visualise and interpret what they read in their
own way. They can ask themselves questions (explicit or implicit), notice
things about the language, or simply let the story carry them along.
ER
offers Comprehensible Input.
Reading is
the most readily available form of comprehensible input, especially in places
where there is hardly any contact with the target language. If carefully chosen
to suit learners’ level, it offers them repeated encounters with language items
they have already met. This helps them to consolidate what they already know
and to extend it. There is no way any learner will meet new language enough
times to learn it in the limited number of hours in class. The only reliable
way to learn a language is through massive and repeated exposure to it in
context: precisely what ER provides.
ER
enhances general language competence.
In ways we
so far do not fully understand, the benefits of ER extend beyond reading. There
is ‘a spread of effect from reading competence to other language skills ~
writing, speaking and control over syntax.’ (Elley 1991) The same phenomenon is
noted by Day and Bamford (1998: 32-39) but they even note evidence of
improvements in the spoken language. So reading copiously seems to benefit all
language skills, not just reading.
ER
helps develop general, world knowledge.
Many, if not
most, students have a rather limited experience and knowledge of the world they
inhabit both cognitively and affectively. ER opens windows on the world seen
through different eyes. This educational function of ER cannot be emphasised
enough.
ER
extends, consolidates and sustains vocabulary growth.
Vocabulary
is not learned by a single exposure. ER allows for multiple encounters
with words and phrases in context thus making possible the progressive
accretion of meanings to them. By presenting items in context, it also
makes the deduction of meaning of unknown items easier. There have been many
studies of vocabulary acquisition from ER (Day et al 1991, Nation and Wang
1999, Pigada and Schmitt, 2006). Michael Hoey’s theory of ‘lexical
priming’ (Hoey 1991, 2005) also gives powerful support to the
effect of multiple exposure to language items in context.
ER
helps improve writing.
There is a
well-established link between reading and writing. Basically, the more we
read, the better we write. Exactly how this happens is still not
understood (Kroll 2003) but the fact that it happens is well-documented (Hafiz
and Tudor 1989) Commonsense would indicate that as we meet more language, more
often, through reading, our language acquisition mechanism is primed to produce
it in writing or speech when it is needed. (Hoey 2005).
ER
creates and sustains motivation to read more.
The virtuous
circle - success leading to success - ensures that, as we read successfully in
the foreign language, so we are encouraged to read more. The effect on
self-esteem and motivation of reading one’s first book in the foreign language
is undeniable. It is what Krashen calls a ‘home run’ book : ‘my first’! This
relates back to the point at the beginning of the need to find ‘compelling’,
not merely interesting, reading material. It is this that fuels the compulsion
to read the next Harry Potter. It also explains the relatively new trend in
graded readers toward original and more compelling subject matter. (Moses)
So why don’t teachers use ER more often?
A good
question. When I conducted an inquiry among teachers worldwide, the answers
came down to these:
a)
Insufficient time.
b) Too
costly.
c) Reading
materials not available.
d) ER not
linked to the syllabus and the examination.
e) Lack of
understanding of ER and its benefits.
f) Downward
pressure on teachers to conform to syllabi and textbooks.
g)
Resistance from teachers, who find it impossible to stop teaching and to allow
learning to take place.
Oddly, the
elephant in the room: the Internet culture of young people, was not mentioned.
There is work on the non-linear reading required by Internet users in Murray
and Macpherson (2005), and articles on hypermedia by Richards (2000), and
Ferradas Moi (2008) and some interesting reflections in Johnson
(2006). The ‘non-reader’ issue will not go away but it is too important
to deal with here and needs a separate article.
Extensive
Reading for Teachers
My
contention is that reading extensively, promiscuously and associatively is good
for teacher, and for personal development. ‘The idea of the teacher having to
be someone who is constantly developing and growing as a whole human being as a
prerequisite for being able to truly help his or her pupils to be able to
do the same, is such a core truth of teaching, yet it is typically ignored in
FLT. (Peter Lutzker)
ER helps
teachers to be better informed, both about their profession and about the
world. This makes them more interesting to be around – and students generally
like their teachers to be interesting people. For our own sanity we need to
read outside the language teaching ghetto. For the sake of our students too.
It also
helps teachers to keep their own use of English fresh. As we saw, the research
on language learner reading shows how extensive reading feeds into improvements
in all areas of language competence. (Krashen 2004) If this is true for
learners, how much more true for teachers, who risk infection by exposure to so
much restricted and error - laden English or who only read professional
literature? Regular wide reading can add zest and pleasure to our own use of
the language.
Teachers who
show that they read widely are models for their students. We often tell
students to ‘read more’ but why should they read if we do not? Teachers who are
readers are more likely to have students who read too.
Furthermore,
the books we read outside our narrow professional field can have an
unpredictable effect on our practice within it. So much of what we learn
is learned sub-consciously. Its effects spread more by infection than by direct
injection. And it is highly individual. Individuals form associative
networks among the books they read. This results in a kind of personal
intertextuality, where the patterns form and re-form as we read more different
books. This gives us a rich mental yeast which we can use to interact with
others, while still retaining our individual take on the texts and the world.
So Extensive
Reading has a lot to offer - both for our students and ourselves Read on!.
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