Speed Reading Talk

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Speed Reading Should Also Improve Understanding Of What Was Read

Friday, July 25th, 2008    Subscribe To Our Feed

There is a lot of talk about how speed reading can improve a person’s life and even some claims that speed reading can improve a person’s ability to soak up information at an amazing rate, making them more valuable to employers. While the ability to read faster may be beneficial for some, for others it is more a matter of improving comprehension of what they have read as well as being able to retain the information they have received that will make a difference in their work and personal life.

On average, a person will read at the rate of about two words per second with typical comprehension and for most that will be fast enough. Taking a speed reading course may improve their reading speeds to four or even six words per second without any loss of retention as to the material. Others however, may want to use speed reading for reading 10 or more words per second with better than average comprehension and for them a course in speed reading may be the answer.

Most speed reading courses are designed to help readers decide on the fly what words are worth reading and which ones are not. Being able to look at a word without having to concentrate on each and every letter to visualize the word is already practiced by most readers, but a speed reading course can help them eliminate more words in a sentence increasing their rate of reading.

Gaining Speed Without Losing Quality

One of the biggest challenges in speed reading is what is termed subvocalization. Children in their early years are taught to read to themselves causing them to sound out every word in their head as they are reading. With speed reading, the words are not silently read in their mind while going through the material and only the words that have meaning to the context of the material is retained to become part of the comprehension of the material.

Different instruction techniques are taught for speed reading and they may not all have the same desirable outcome for each person looking to improve their reading speed. Unlike repetitious physical tasks where the same movements performed with practice will enable a person to perform the task quicker, speed reading attempts to train the brain to recognize only the words that are important to the materials being read without the need to hear them in their mind. However, similar to physical tasks, practice in speed reading will increase their reading speed as time goes on.

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