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Fast Reading: Sprinting Through Any
Book
For the majority of readers today, making it through a People
magazine in under two hours is their idea of fast reading. And
that includes the captions about Britney Spears and her latest
fashion faux pas. Emphasis on reading slacked off for several
years. Book report were not as prevalent in required class
work, and library attendance was down. Of course, this is also
before the world had ever heard of Harry Potter, Hogwarts, or
an author named Rowling.
Thanks to certain recent reading programs that have been
implemented in school throughout the country, interest in
reading is making a comeback. Students are not only learning
how to read better, they are also learning to read faster than
before.
The concept is fast reading is not at all new. Although it has
its critics, this idea was experimented with by the Air Force
and Harvard Business School. Machines were invented and used in
the forties to speed up reading. Schoolteacher Evelyn Wood
developed what she called the “Wood Method” in the late
fifties; by moving her hand across a page, Wood found she could
focus on and remember words better without having to read every
word on the page.
Her fast reading method was later called “Reading Dynamics” and
endorsed by such prominent figures as former President John F.
Kennedy.
Fast Reading Styles And Know How
There are three main ways that fast reading is practiced:
1) Scanning
2) Skimming
3) Keyword Reading
Scanning is a fast reading method used to locate specific
information quickly rather than reading the entire document
word for word. It is a much more efficient way of going through
several pages of content in a short amount of time. Scanning
would be a excellent fast reading avenue for sifting out
irrelevant information on web sites.
Skimming is another fast reading method that may seem very
similar to scanning, but they are different; scanning is
reading only the areas in which your desired subject is
mentioned based on chapter descriptions or sub-headings.
Skimming is picking out highlight of the particular document or
book. Think of it as mentally summarizing the material. Movie
critics do not lay out the movie they are reviewing
scene-by-scene; they give you the main theme and just enough
description so you have an idea what you are going to see. That
is what you are doing when skimming a book, web site, or other
document.
A third way to more effectively cover large
amounts of material in a minimal amount of time is using
a keyword in the text; highlight it in your mind and use
the skimming technique to locate that word. Using this
method is like flying over a city in a helicopter; you
can choose certain familiar buildings to get an idea of
how to navigate. Keyword reading helps you get an idea
about the subject of the content you are reading. Popular
keywords used by the author can usually be found in the
main title and within the first paragraph.
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