adrienne pfp
adrienne
@adrienne
Anyone ever try to consciously learn to read faster? How did it go? “How much more could you get done if you completed all of your required reading in 1/3 or 1/5 the time?” is a nice thought 💭 https://tim.blog/2009/07/30/speed-reading-and-accelerated-learning/
11 replies
0 recast
5 reactions

Katherine pfp
Katherine
@keccers.eth
This is (maybe my only) true God-given skill. When I was a kid my mom didn’t believe I had recall bc I read so fast and she would quiz me on the books trying to prove I couldn’t remember. It’s only an asset if you apply it productively. I use it to be terminally online and find/curate cool articles so eh 😂
2 replies
0 recast
2 reactions

Michael Pfister pfp
Michael Pfister
@pfista
I think comprehension and synthesis are more important than reading speed, if you have to make the trade off. I stopped worrying about speed and do what feels natural and effective. Have tried speed reading extensions though, but felt gimmicky
2 replies
0 recast
0 reaction

rafa pfp
rafa
@rafa
I’ve actually done the opposite and gotten more value out of it. Read slower, means I think more and can apply what I read to a much richer set of circumstances hahaha. I sometimes read only a chapter of a book, but take lots of notes, then might move to another book altogether.
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Cameron Armstrong pfp
Cameron Armstrong
@cameron
I bucket the things I read into 2 categories: skim and deep Maybe this is a hot take, but most writing out there isn't very good and shouldn't be read deeply if you value your time. When you find the things worth reading deeply, then do so. (reading for entertainment is completely different tho)
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

erica pfp
erica
@heavygweit
I think @kerman has! Or he’s just naturally an insanely fast reader 😅 I’ve always been curious how much comprehension changes, I’m a medium-speed reader but I like to take my time and mind map out concepts as I read
1 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

Naomi  pfp
Naomi
@naomiii
I've always been somewhat of a fast reader. But I too stopped any attempts to speed up... It feels like one of those activities that don't have to be overoptimised. On that note, I got Blinkist because I thought it could be a way to read more... Not using it at all 😂
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Gabriel Ayuso ⌁ pfp
Gabriel Ayuso ⌁
@gabrielayuso.eth
I tried it a while back but it didn't stick. I listen more than I read. I listen at 2x so that takes care of it. When I read, I tend to stop, think and write. I also tend to skim through paragraphs and chapters and then stop on portions that get my attention.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Tom Beck pfp
Tom Beck
@tombeck.eth
Reading fast is antithetical to how I was trained to read in college. Close reading is what I was taught, which requires slowing down—sometimes way way down.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

🎩.artlu.eth👃- 呂Kunst pfp
🎩.artlu.eth👃- 呂Kunst
@artlu
I practiced a specific technique from a book (coordinated finger+eye movements). It worked to increase speed while maintaining retention. Curious: what age is best to teach a kid this technique? Too early, they don't know what they don't know yet. Too late, they spend more time reading less...
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Picnic pfp
Picnic
@picnic
Yes, I’ve tried! The good old “Evelyn Wood Speed-Reading Program” I have no idea how it got on my shelf, but it was very confident that it could teach me to bypass language and have the experience of watching a movie in my head while reading instead of seeing words. THAT was a compelling promise. Didn’t work!
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

dthinks pfp
dthinks
@dthinks
I use both the written text and use audio book to follow along. That has been the fastest way to get through a book with full comprehension for me. It does help I use the Libby app to get one version and usually purchase the other.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction