Chapter 8: 25 Ways to Get Through Printed Material
119
14.
C
all for outlines of the reading passage.
In a sense, participants will have to crawl around inside the author’s head to learn the logical
flow she must have envisioned for the selected passage. In this reverse-engineering exercise,
they will wind up with the outline that the author probably started with as she planned her
presentation of the material. Have them compare outlines.
Brainteaser:
What number goes where the question mark now resides in the box?
3 4 5
552 772 ?
Answer: 992. The lower numbers always end in 2. The first two digits in the lower number are obtained by adding
two to the top number and repeating the result. Three is added to the next top number and the result is repeated.
Continuing with the sequence of two and then three, the next number to be added to a top number and then repeated
would be 4, giving us 99.
15.
D
o a mix ‘n’ match.
Review the material in advance, and write one sentence for each paragraph. Assign each one-
sentence paragraph summary a letter, but not in sequential order. (In other words, if there were
five paragraphs and five summaries for them, your first summary would not be labeled A, and
your second would not be B. Assign random letters to the summaries—one out-of-order letter
for each paragraph.)
Make copies of the labeled, one-sentence summaries—one for each group. Cut the sentences
into strips and place them in envelopes—one summary-filled envelope for every group.
Make sure to have your answers ready (the number of the paragraph and the random-letter
assigned to it).
(continued)
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