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Reading Strategies Read Faster. Read Better.

Efficient reading

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3 Useful Reading Strategies

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Page 1: Efficient reading

Reading Strategies

Read Faster.Read Better.

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Begin with Previewing

• Previewing will give you the general idea of a reading,• Helps you determine the purpose and audience • Very useful for longer texts.• Helps activate your background knowledge Here’s how to preview: • First, read the entire first paragraph• Next, read only the first sentence of each paragraph• Then, read the entire last paragraphs• Look at pictures, subtitles, textual details (bold, italics, etc)

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Then Start Skimming

• Skimming will give you the general idea of a reading• Very useful for shorter texts. • Is a great way to review material you have read before.

Here’s how to skim: • Force your eyes to move

fast. • Sweep your eyes across

each line of type. • Pick up only a few

key words in each line.

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Preview & Skimming• Previewing and Skimming cannot promise

more than 50% comprehension.• To read faster and understand more of what

you read, you need to know a third technique.

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Clustering to increase speed AND comprehension

Most of us learn to read by looking at each word in a sentence — one at a time. Like this:

My — brother — Russell — thinks — monsters…

• Word-by-word reading slows your reading down.• Clustering trains you to look at groups of words • It increases your speed enormously.

Here’s how to cluster: • Train your eyes to see all the words

in clusters of up to three or four words at a glance.

• Here’s how I’d cluster the story we just skimmed:

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Compare the Eye Fixations of Slow, Average, and Fast Readers

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Slow Reader’s Eye Fixations

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Average Reader’s Eye Fixations

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Fast Reader’s Eye Fixations

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Clustering Takes PracticeHere’s how to go about it: 

• Pick something light to read. • Read it as fast as you can. • Concentrate on seeing three to four words at once rather

than one word at a time. • Then reread the piece at your normal speed to see what you

missed the first time.

Practice fifteen minutes every day and you might pick up the technique in a week or so.

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Special Thanks

• How to Read Faster by Bill Cosby• A Reader’s Handbook by Rose Wassman and

Anne Paye