How to reading
10. Read Early in the Day
Many people can double their reading speed and improve their
concentration by reading the material that’s important to them early in
the day.
9. Prioritize Your Reading
Create three piles for your reading materials – important, moderately
important, and least important. Then read the material in their order of
importance. You’ll improve your reading speed by doing this, and
improve your reading comprehension by getting to the important material
first, when your mind is clear and sharp.
8. Skim Material First for Main Ideas
Speed read for main ideas in nonfiction works like how-to books and
educational texts. Scan the table of contents and first and last
sentences of each paragraph. You’ll improve your reading speed and
comprehension if you understand a book’s structure first. This will help
you know which parts of the book to skim and which parts to read more
carefully.
7. Form a Question
Improve your reading comprehension, reading speed, and concentration by
turning headings and subheadings in textbooks and other nonfiction books
into questions. Then scan the text for the answers. Your reading speed
improves by doing this, and you become focused on your material.
6. Read in the Proper Environment
Prop your book or magazine using a bookstand – angling your reading
material at 45 degrees improves your reading speed and reduces
eyestrain. Avoid reading difficult or important material in bed, where
your mind and body tend to relax. You’ll stay alert if you sit at a desk
instead.
5. Write a Course of Action on Correspondence
Improve your reading speed and avoid re-reading correspondence by
jotting brief notes immediately after reading each piece of
correspondence. Simply refer to your notes on each piece when you’re
reading to respond some time later.
4. Avoid Highlighting
Although readers believe that highlighting in yellow (or any other
color, for that matter) improves their reading speed and comprehension,
the reverse is actually true. Highlighting simply means they don’t want
to bother learning the material right now. The result: They end up
reading the material twice, and possibly not understanding or
remembering it either time!
3. Preview Before Reading
Look through material first to get a sense of what’s interesting and
important to you, and what you might be able to skip. Then focus on the
sections that you need to understand and remember, and skim or skip the
rest.
2. Use a Flexible Reading Speed
Some reading material must be read slowly and carefully: legal
contracts, mathematical equations, and poetry are a few examples. Other
reading material can be read at much faster speeds: newspapers,
magazines, and novels. Adjust your reading speed to the type of reading
material and your reading purpose.
1. Enroll in a Speed Reading Class
Avoid on-line speed reading courses and do-it-yourself speed reading
software. They don’t work. Speed reading is best learned in a speed
reading class taught by a knowledgeable, experienced, speed reading
expert. If you are in New York, New Jersey or Connecticut, I’d love to
see you in my
speed reading course in New York.
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