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      Barriers to reading in higher education: Rethinking reading support

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND: Reading is a functional academic literacy ability needed by students in higher education. In the South African context, inadequate reading ability is one of the reasons for high undergraduate attrition rates. It seems that role players within this sector are of the opinion that students have reading 'problems' that need to be 'fixed', often by generic reading courses. This article differs from the perception of reading 'problems', as reading is viewed from a lifespan developmental perspective. According to this perspective undergraduate students do not have reading 'problems' but experience reading barriers hindering their reading development and in effect their academic literacy. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to uncover some of these barriers by means of an empirical study conducted at the North-West University (NWU). METHOD: The setting of this study was the Potchefstroom campus of the NWU. A qualitative methodology was chosen whereby 14 individual interviews and 7 focus group interviews were used. The purpose of these interviews was to better understand lecturers' and students' perceptions about the variables of the reading process, namely the reading ability of the reader, the text to be read, the task, and the socio-cultural context. RESULTS: Lecturers and students perceived a number of reading barriers within each variable, namely students' non-compliance and lack of abilities, elements of the textbook and availability of lecturer notes, the format of the task, throughput pressures, and lecturers' assumptions. CONCLUSION: Knowledge of these barriers and knowledge of the interconnectedness of the reading process could enable role players to collaboratively rethink undergraduate reading support, in which the lecturer has a crucial role to play.

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          Most cited references25

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          'Reading ability and academic performance in South Africa: Are we fiddling while Rome is burning?'

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            'Vertical and horizontal discourse: an essay

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              'Making a case for the teaching of reading across the curriculum in higher education'

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Journal
                rw
                Reading & Writing
                Reading & Writing
                AOSIS Publishing on behalf of the Literacy Association of South Africa (LITASA) (Cape Town, Western Cape Province, South Africa )
                2079-8245
                2308-1422
                2019
                : 10
                : 1
                : 1-9
                Affiliations
                [01] Potchefstroom orgnameNorth-West University orgdiv1Faculty of Humanities orgdiv2School of Languages South Africa
                Article
                S2308-14222019000100008
                10.4102/rw.v10i1.241
                4c3bbcf3-f0a8-471e-82a2-9d64c5348e55

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 15 April 2019
                : 07 August 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 26, Pages: 9
                Product

                SciELO South Africa

                Categories
                Original Research

                socio-cultural context,lecturers,Academic literacy,higher education,undergraduate students,reading,reading comprehension,reading development,reading barriers,tasks,textbooks

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