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Friday, February 3rd, 2006 Reading is an integral part of any success program. With all the books and resources available, speed reading is certainly a skill that can make vast improvements in you life. Over the next 10 pages you will find some exercises that will help you in this area. Let me know how these articles have helped you. Here's to Your LifetoSuccess,
Understanding the Basics of Speed Reading
Speed reading is
not just a parlor trick you can use to
impress your friends and family. For many it’s a necessary
tool for managing
time and information in the fast-paced business world, and for many
others,
specifically students, it’s the only way to get through
reading-heavy class
loads. The practiced speed reader can pick up a lengthy document or a thick stack of papers and use their skill to get at the meat of the subject by skimming for the most important details and information. Without developing the ability to speed read, this time-saving technique is merely flipping through pages fast.
Speed reading, or
increasing the rate at which you read
text, is linked to increasing the rate at which you understand what
you’re
reading. The key to successful speed reading is increasing your
understanding
of the text as you increase the rate at which you read the words. It
takes
training and practice, but don’t be intimidated by the idea
of a challenge.
Think of it as the next, natural step to your reading development. Once
you’ve
mastered it, it’s a skill that will stick with you for the
rest of your
life. As a child, when you began to learn to read, chances are you began with the alphabet and the specific sounds each letter makes. Then you learned how to combine and blend letter sounds to decipher words. It’s called letter-by-letter reading. Then something clicked and you began to recognize words without having to sound out each letter one at a time and you graduated to word-by-word reading.
If you are in the
practice of moving your
lips, or speaking or whispering while you read, you’re
slowing yourself down
dramatically. Your lips can only move so fast. You should be able to
read at
least two or three times faster than you can speak. In effect,
you’re keeping
yourself at that word-by-word stage that children generally grow out of
in
elementary school. |