Getting to Know Your Textbook
1. Examine the title page:
·
Who are
the authors?
·
What is
their standing in their fields? (Perhaps you can ask your professor.)
·
Do their
training and background qualify them to write a book of this type?
·
Who are
the publishers?
·
When was
this textbook published? What does that tell you about the book?
2. Examine the preface or introduction:
·
Why is a
preface written?
·
What does
it tell you about the book?
·
Do the
authors introduce any unusual features of your book in the preface and prepare
you to be on the lookout for them?
3. Examine the table of contents:
·
What does
the table of contents tell?
·
How is
this textbook organized? What main divisions has it?
·
Compare
the table of contents with that of another book in the same field. Do the two
books cover the same topics? Are these the topics you expected to find covered
in this text?
4. Examine index, glossary, other
material at the back of the book:
·
How does
the index differ from the table of contents? How does it resemble the table of
contents?
·
What sort
of topics should be looked up in the index instead of the table of contents?
·
What are
cross references?
·
Is there a
glossary in your textbook? Can you use diacritical markings successfully to
pronounce a word?
·
Is there
an appendix in your book? Why isn't this information included in the body of
the book? How would it have affected the organization?
·
What is
the literal meaning of "index" according to the dictionary?
5. Examine study questions, guides, and
other helps:
·
Does the
text provide study aids to help in understanding the text?
·
Are the
study aids in the form of questions, exercises, or activities?
·
If
questions are used, do they simply require finding the answers or must you do
some critical problem-type thinking to arrive at answers?
·
Are there
study aids both preceding and following a chapter? Which types of aids help you
most?
·
Does the
text provide suggestions for other readings or materials designed to help you
understand this chapter?
6. Examine chapter headings, sectional
headings, and margin guides:
·
Look at
the chapter heading and then the section headings that follow. Write them down
and see if this gives an overview of the chapter.
·
How do
headings help in skimming a chapter for specific information?
·
Do you
find different kinds of type in your chapter? Does this help you understand the
organization of your textbook better? How?
·
Does the
text provide help in identifying material to be found within each paragraph? Is
the topic sentence indicated?
·
Does the
book use summaries? How do these help? What is the difference between giving
the gist of a chapter and summarizing its contents?
7. Examine maps, pictures, charts,
diagrams, and tables:
·
Which of
these visual aids is used? Do you understand them?
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