2.4.1 Principles for Reading Comprehension
Reading is a bottom-up process in which readers "must rst recognize a multiplicity of linguistic signals and use their linguistic data processing mechanisms to impose some sort of order to these signals" (Brown, 1994: 284). The reader chooses among all the information meaningful data and infers meanings, decides what to retain and what not to retain in his memory, and moves on.
Meaning is thus constructed through reading not because a text carries it but because the reader brings information, knowledge, experience and culture to the printed word. This theory, known as Schema Theory emphasizes the conceptually driven, or top-down processing that brings background information to make decisions about meaning (Brown, 1994: 284).
It is worth mentioning that we might not subscribe to either process in particular, rather learners should be encouraged to combine bottom-up and top-down processes in reading, which implies in practice doing such things as discussing the topic of a text before reading it, arousing expectations, eliciting connections between in the text and situation know to the learners (Ur, 1996:141).
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