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A Review on Reading Theories and It's Implication to the Teaching of Reading

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A Review on Reading Theories and It's Implication to the Teaching of Reading
A REVIEW ON READING THEORIES AND IT’S IMPLICATION TO THE TEACHING OF READING
Parlindungan Pardede
Universitas Kristen Indonesia

Abstract
Opini dan masukan untuk peningkatan pengajaran membaca kepada pembelajar bahasa Inggris sebagai bahasa asing, baik yang didasarkan pada hasil penelitian maupun pengalaman, tersedia sangat banyak dalam kepustakaan pengajaran bahasa. Tulisan ini merupakan sebuah rangkuman atas berbagai teori, temuan dan pendapat tentang pengajaran membaca. Pemahaman terhadap topik-topik tersebut, terutama tentang teori top-down, bottom-up, dan meta-cognitive, diharapkan dapat dijadikan landasan untuk meningkatkan teknik pengajaran membaca. Dengan demikian, kemahiran membaca para pembelajar bahasa Inggris sebagai bahasa asing dapat ditingkatkan secara signifikan.
Kata Kunci: top-down, bottom-up, schemata, meta-cognitive, pre-reading, during-reading, after-reading

Introduction
Among the four language skills, reading is possibly the most extensively and intensively studied by experts in the field of language teaching. The results of the researches conducted for many decades on nature of reading—how people learn to process textual information—have contributed contrasting theories about what works best in the teaching of reading. As a result, language educators can choose among a wide variety of teaching methods and techniques for students learning to read in their second language (SL) or foreign language (FL).
For students who are learning a SL/FL reading is the most crucial skill to master due to several reasons. First, students can usually perform at a higher level in reading than in any other skills. They can quite accurately understand written materials that they could not discuss orally or in writing with equivalent accuracy or thoroughness. Such condition will undoubtedly enhance their motivation to learn. Second, reading necessitates very minimum requirements. Different from speaking which requires opportunities to interact with sparring



Bibliography: Barnett, M. A. 1988. “Teaching Reading in a Foreign Language.” ERIC Digest. Anderson, R. 1994. “Role of the reader’s schema in comprehension, learning, and memory.” In Ruddell, Ruddell, and Singer 1994, 469–82. Anderson, R., and P. D. Pearson. 1988. “A schematheoretic view of basic processes in reading comprehension.” In Carrell, Devine, and Eskey 1988, 37–55. Block, E. L. 1992. “How They Read: Comprehension Monitoring of L1 and L2 Readers.” TESOL Quarterly 26(2) Bransford, J Carrell, P. L. 1984. The effects of rhetorical organization on ESL readers. TESOL Quarterly 18 (3): 441–69. Carrell, P. L., B. G. Pharis, and J. C. Liberto. 1989. Metacognitive strategy training for ESL reading. TESOL Quarterly 23 (4): 647–78. Chen, H., and M. Graves. 1995. Effects of previewing and providing background knowledge on Taiwanese college students’ comprehension of American short stories. TESOL Quarterly 29 (4): 663–86. Goodman, K. 1988. The reading process. In Carrell, Devine, and Eskey 1988, 11–21. Kucer, S. B. 1987. “The cognitive base of reading and writing.” In The dynamics of language learning, ed. J. Squire, 27–51. Urbana, IL: National Conference on Research in English. Mcdonough, S. H. 1995. Strategy and Skill in Learning a Foreign Language. New York: St. Martin’s Press. Omaggio, M. A. 1993. Teaching language in context. Boston: Heinle and Heinle. Reutzel, D. R. 1985. “Reconciling Schema Theory and the Basal Reading Lesson.” The Reading Teacher 39 (2): 194–98. Rigg, P Rudell, Ruddell, and Singer, eds. 1994, Theoretical models and processes of reading. 4th ed. Newark, DE: International Reading Association. Samuels, S. J., and M. L. Kamil. 1988. “Models of the Reading Process.” In Carrell, Devine, and Eskey, eds. 1988. 22–36. Smith, F Stanovich, K. E. 1980. “Toward an Interactive-Compensatory Model of Individual Differences in The Development of Reading Fluency.” Research Reading Quarterly 16 (1): 32-71. Tierney, R. J., and P. D. Pearson. 1994. “Learning to learn from text: A Framework for Improving Classroom Practice.” In Rudell, Ruddell, and Singer, eds. 1994. 496–513.

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