Reading More Efficiently
Here is some information about reading more
efficiently from an English professor who is a
reading specialist.
READING BETTER AND FASTER----
(by Dennis Doyle)-----
For most people, it is easy to learn to read
faster. Your reading rate is often just a matter
of habit. But to begin, you may need to try to
change some habits and try these tips:---------
1. Pay attention when you read and read as if it
really matters. Most people read in the same way
that they watch television, i.e. in an
inattentive, passive way. Reading takes effort and
you must make the effort. A wise teacher once told
me that you can learn anything if you do three
things: -------------
PAY ATTENTION---
PAY ATTENTION and
PAY ATTENTION.------
There are some simple methods that you can use to
pay better attention and get more out of your
textbook reading time. Different authors call it
different things, but many researchers say that
you will improve your comprehension if you
somehow "preview" the passage before you actually
sit down and read every word. .............
To do a preview you:-----
take 30 to 60 seconds......
look over the title of the chapter.
look at all the headings, subheadings and marked,
italic or dark print.
look at any pictures or illustrations, charts or
graphs.
quickly skim over the passage, reading the first
and last paragraph and glancing at the first
sentence of every other paragraph.
close the book and ask yourself:
---What is the main idea? ------
---What kind of writing is it? --------
---What is the author's purpose?-------
You might not think that you could possibly answer
these questions with so little exposure to the
material, but if you do the preview correctly, you
should have some very good general ideas. If you
have a general idea of what the passage is about
before you really read it, you will be able to
understand and remember the passage better.
When you finally get to the point where you are
actually slowly reading the passage, read in
a "questioning" manner -as if you were seaching
for something. It sometimes helps if you take the
heading or title of a chapter and turn it into a
question........
For example, if the heading of a section in the
text is "The Causes of the Civil War", take that
title and switch it into a question like: "What
are the causes of the Civil War?". Now you have a
goal; something to look for; something to find
out. When you are goal-oriented, you are more
likely to reach the goal. At least you'll remember
one thing about the text which you have just
read....
2. Stop talking to yourself when you read. People
talk to themselves in 2 ways, by:
vocalizing, which is the actual moving of your
lips as you read, and
subvocalizing, which is talking to yourself in
your head as you silently read.
Both of these will slow you down to the point in
which you find that you can't read any faster than
you can speak. Speech is a relatively slow
activity; for most, the average speed is about 250
WPM (words per minute)..........
Reading should be an activity which involves only
the eyes and the brain. Vocalization ties reading
to actual speaking. Try to think of reading as if
you were looking at a landscape, a panorama of
ideas, rather than looking at the rocks at your
feet........
3. Read in thought groups. Studies have shown that
when we read, our eyes must make small stops along
the line. Poor readers make many, many more
fixations (eyestops) than good readers. Not only
does this slow you down, but it inhibits
comprehension because meaning is easier to pull
from groups of words rather than from individual
words or even single letters. Try to read in
phrases of three or four words, especially in
complete clauses and prepositional phrases. Your
mind may internalize them as if the whole phrase
is like one big meaning-rich word........
4. Don't keep re-reading the same phrases. Poor
readers habitually read and re-read the same
phrase over and over again. This habit of
making "regressions" doubles or triples reading
time and often does not result in better
comprehension. A single careful, attentive reading
may not be enough for full comprehension, but is
often more effective than constant regressions in
the middle of a reading. It is best to work on
paying closer attention the first time through. Do
a preview first before the careful reading and try
the tips I mentioned above. You'll remember better
without the rereading............
5. Vary your reading rate to suit the difficulty
and type of writing of the text. Poor readers
always read at the same slow rate. An efficient
reader speeds up for easier material and slows
down for the hard. Some things were not meant to
be read quickly at all. Legal material and very
difficult text should be read slowly. Easier
material and magazines and newspapers can be read
quickly. Poetry and plays were meant to be
performed, and if not acted out, then at least,
spoken out loud orally. This obviously will
conflict with good speed reading method which
forbids vocalization. Religious writings and
scripture were originally written to be recited
and listened to by an audience which was likely to
be intelligent, but illiterate. The "fun" of
poetry, plays, or prayer is not really experienced
if you "speed read" the text...........
I don't know if I can accomplish all he suggests
or not, but I am sure some of this will help me.
Posted 21:40
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