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  • Hello my Socratica Friends!

  • Were here to help you be a GREAT student!

  • Today, were going to focus on how you get information INTO YOUR BRAIN.

  • Well, one way.

  • By reading.

  • Wouldn’t you like to be able to read faster, and understand everything you read?

  • Doesn’t SPEED READING sound like a great idea?

  • You may have seen ads saying they can teach you how to read faster.

  • This is a real thing, but it’s not magic.

  • Youre not going to be able to read thousands of words per minute

  • or a whole book in an hour.

  • Let’s discuss how much speed reading can actually work for you.

  • Let me add a quick disclaimer, if youve been having trouble with your reading - if

  • you find it hard to focus on words, or letters get mixed up, and youre really trying but

  • you can’t seem to improve...

  • There are reading difficulties, such as dyslexia, that are best handled by a specialist.

  • Also, keep in mind there will be some physical differences between people, that can affect

  • how fast they can read.

  • Some people have better vision than others.

  • And as you age, you may start to notice changes in your vision.

  • Check with your eye doctor to make sure you don’t need reading glasses,

  • before you get discouraged.

  • Now, on to speed reading.

  • First, we need to understand thatreadingis not just one thing you do.

  • There’s more to it than just how fast you can move your eyes down the page.

  • It involves how your eyes move, how they focus, and most importantly what goes on in your

  • brain when you read.

  • How would you speed each of these parts up?

  • Let’s take a closer look at each step.

  • Now this may surprise you - You can really only focus on one or two words at a time,

  • with maybe a few bonus letters on either side.

  • There’s a physical limit here - youre not going to be able to actually read using

  • your peripheral vision - only this central region of your visual field, sometimes called

  • foveal vision.”

  • As you read, youll linger on these couple of words for a short time - were talking

  • on the order of a few hundred milliseconds - and then

  • jump to the next few words in the sentence.

  • Depending on if a word is especially meaningful, you may linger a little longer.

  • We call this FIXATION.

  • If the word contains less meaning - words like the, an, to, etc. you jump away from

  • those words faster, because there isn’t much there to comprehend.

  • Thisjumpingmotion is called Eye Saccades or Saccadic Motion.

  • You many think that you continue on this way in a straightforward fashion, marching down

  • the page, but readers also jump back from time to time.

  • These are little episodes of review.

  • These regressions help you connect what you just read with something you read earlier.

  • Maybe you don’t quite remember... you need to check.. ah, right, so now you can move

  • on.

  • Again, this all happens in fractions of a second.

  • This isn’t you being undisciplined - it’s a normal part of the reading process.

  • What about the time spent jumping around?

  • Can that be improved or eliminated?

  • You can certainly get better at following a page with practice.

  • Do you remember, when you first learned to read, how you had to keep your finger on each

  • line in your book so you didn’t get lost?

  • Now, you probably don’t.

  • That’s a sign your skill has improved.

  • Youre better at tracking along a line of text and letting your eyes jump on their own,

  • without missing.

  • You may still miss occasionally, though, especially if the text is small and there isn’t a lot

  • of space between lines.

  • If youre reading digital text, on a computer or an e-reader, you may be able to fiddle

  • around with the settings to better match your preferred text size and line spacing.

  • You don’t have this option with a paper copy of a book.

  • With that in mind, if you really want to keep on track, don’t feel bad about trailing

  • a finger or a pencil along as you read.

  • Hey, if that tool works, use it!

  • Remember, though, that need to backtrack, orregress,”

  • that happens naturally in reading.

  • Don’t fight it too much.

  • When it happens, it’s probably for a good reason.

  • After all, your goal should be to understand what youre reading, not

  • to race to the finish line.

  • This is one way that paper copies of books are easier for you to read than digital books.

  • When you open a book, you can see a lot - two entire pages.

  • On my e-reader, I’m lucky if I can see one whole paragraph.

  • That means I have to physically turn the page back once or twice if I need to check on something

  • I just read.

  • That really slows down your reading.

  • Maybe, one day, someone will come out with a nice electronic reader that displays as

  • much as a real book.

  • We can hope.

  • The most extreme solution to speeding up your eye saccades is to eliminate them altogether.

  • In this technique, you load your text into some specialized software, and one word at

  • a time is displayed right in the center of your visual field.

  • This is called Rapid Serial Visual Processing, or RSVP for short.

  • You can display individual words at a very fast rate, much faster than theyre going

  • here, and usually you can keep up with them.

  • The original equipment used for this technique was called a tachistoscope, which was a kind

  • of slide projector, rapidly showing images to train people

  • to very, very quickly recognize targets.

  • Like...enemy planes.

  • This military technology was adopted by educators for a while, to try to increase students

  • reading speed.

  • It’s making a bit of a comeback now, in the form of some speed reading apps.

  • There’s no denying that you can get through the words faster this way - you don’t spend

  • any time jumping your eyes and refocusing.

  • But, you lose some of the native reading skill you bring to the table.

  • For instance, remember that you naturally focus a little longer on important words.

  • Content dense words.

  • And you zoom right over smaller connecting words that are less important.

  • These RSVP technologies typically show every word for the same amount of time, so you lose

  • that natural advantage.

  • I’m sure, well eventually develop a smarter system where you group words together - a

  • big content word shown along with a little connecting word,

  • but I don’t think were there yet.

  • Another issue with this technique is it COMPLETELY eliminates the possibility to backtrack and

  • grab a line from a previous sentence or paragraph to help you understand what you just read.

  • Regressions, remember, are not all bad.

  • It’s not like a bad habit you need to completely eliminate.

  • It’s part of how we read to understand.

  • I really don’t see how we can resolve that issue.

  • The need to backtrack seems fundamentally incompatible with this technique.

  • Moving on from eye motions to the actual READING.

  • When you first learned to read, depending on your schooling, you most likely learned

  • tosound outwords, using phonics.

  • Fuh - aw - nicks…….Phonics.”

  • Sometimes you see people moving their lips a bit as they read, falling back into their

  • earliest reading habits.

  • Even if you don’t speak out loud, or move your lips, you probably still hear your own

  • voice inside your head.

  • In Kindergarten, we called thisreading to yourself.”

  • Many, if not all, readers continue to do this, to some degree.

  • The more technical term for this issubvocalization.”

  • Youre actually using the auditory parts of your brain as you subvocalize, and youre

  • sending signals to your vocal cords, as if you were speaking the words out loud (even

  • though to an outside observer, youre reading silently).

  • There’s been some research to take advantage of subvocalization as a way to communicate

  • wordlessly - for instance, for astronauts, or soldiers who need to communicate in loud

  • or remote settings.

  • Many speed reading techniques focus on trying to eliminate subvocalization.

  • The thought is, reading out loud takes a lot longer than just visually taking in the words

  • and jumping on to the next word.

  • But it may not be possible to completely eliminate subvocalization.

  • Research has shown that even when readers are trying their best to not subvocalize,

  • and theyre speeding their eyes along the page, some signals are still going on in the

  • auditory parts of the brain, and signals are getting through to the vocal cords.

  • Furthermore, if you try to FORCE yourself to speed past every single word without subvocalizing

  • them, you will probably find that your comprehension goes down.

  • That slightly slower pace due to subvocalization seems to allow for a little time to better

  • process what youre reading.

  • In any case, it makes sense, if you are interested in reading faster, not to INDULGE yourself

  • in a slow, plodding internal voice.

  • Don’t perform your reading as if youre in a play, either, doing all the voices and

  • including dramatic pauses.

  • In other words, don’t get hung up on COMPLETELY eliminating subvocalization (because youre

  • not going to be able to), but maybe try to minimize its impact on your reading speed.

  • Finally, let’s talk about that last stage of reading, comprehension, which is undoubtedly

  • the most important.

  • Unlike the earlier stages of reading, it seems much less mechanical - it’s a fluid process

  • and is ever-changing, and has to do with what you bring to the table when you read.

  • So much goes into reading comprehension.

  • Recognition of words and concepts, putting what you just read into context, deciding

  • if it answers outstanding questions you had, whether you were surprised by the information...and

  • your level of comprehension is different every time you read.

  • Just think - when you first started to read, every single line, every chapter, every book

  • you finished was a milestone.

  • The more books you read, the more experienced you grew as a reader.

  • This is a skill that takes a long, long time to build up.

  • Youre still developing that skill, because each time you gain information by reading

  • it, you have yet another reading experience to draw on.

  • The very best way to become a great reader is...to read.

  • A lot.

  • Read what you like, but make sure you read some challenging books as well.

  • In addition to just plain reading a lot, there are other concrete steps you can take to more

  • quickly improve your comprehension.

  • Build your working vocabulary.

  • If youre reading something technical, make sure to consult a glossary for this subject.

  • If you keep finding yourself tripping up on the same few words, go back to our favourite

  • vocabulary building technique: flashcards, with spaced repetition.

  • Pretty soon, youll OWN those words, and youll be able to quickly understand sentences

  • where they appear.

  • One popular technique for reading textbooks more efficiently is pre-reading - taking a

  • sneak peek at the chapter by reading section headings, any boldface text,

  • and the chapter summaries.

  • You might call it skimming, especially if you dip in here and there.

  • Try reading the first and last sentences of each paragraph.

  • This way youll know what’s coming before you read the whole chapter.

  • A prepared mind is better equipped to take in new information.

  • Try it!

  • Well talk more about this and other techniques for reading textbooks in a separate video.

  • Now let’s try a little test.

  • Well put a link to a speed reading test in the description below.

  • Test yourself, then try some of these techniques we discussed today.

  • Give it a week.

  • Then re-test yourself.

  • What did you find?

  • Tell us about it in the comments.

  • And let us know if YOU have any secrets to improve your reading.

  • We all can become Great Students, together.

  • Want to help us make more great videos?

  • Join the Socratica Team on Patreon!

  • Thank you for watching!

Hello my Socratica Friends!

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