Reading To Remember
○ Make eye contact with all the text not being deliberately skimmed
○ See multiple words in each eye fixation
○ Strive to expand the width of each eye fixation (on an 8.5" width, strive
for three fixations or less per line)
○ Snap eyes from one fixation point to another (horizontal snaps on long
lines, vertical snap if whole line can be seen with one fixation)
○ Get formal training from a reading center if needed
Strategy
○ Know what you are looking for. Identify the material that satisfies the purpose for which you are reading.
○ Skim the reading material first
- primes the memory
- orients the thinking
- think about the headings: they identify what can be skimmed rapidly, what needs more thoughtful reading
○ Read with a purpose.
○ THINK about what you read. The more you think about it, the more you will remember. Ask yourself questions about what you read, as you are reading and afterward.
- Is it satisfying your purpose?
- How does it relate to what you already know? ... and need to know?
- What is not said that should be?
- What is said that you think is wrong or needs elaboration?
- What do you not understand?
- What needs special effort to remember?
- How can you use this understanding and information?
○ Pause and rehearse (after every minute or so, for example)
○ For each new reading segment, ask “How does this build on what I just read?”
○ Reading sessions should be limited (15 to 30 minutes)
○ At the session end, rehearse what you learned - right away, without distractions. Answer again the questions mentioned above.
○ Think about and rehearse what you read at least twice later that day.
○ Rehearse again at least once for the next 2-3 days.
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