How to Read
Faster and Retain More
“How can I read more? How can I read faster? How can I remember and use more?”
Most people don’t realize that the way we’re taught to read
when we’re young makes us poor readers when we’re adults. There are practical
and logical tactics one can utilize to read non-fiction material more
efficiently.
I described this experience as one of the most
useful of my life. University courses became a breeze. My writing got better.
My ability to consume information increased drastically. And I gained tons of
new insights and perspectives on my life and the world around me.
What seems to catch people’s attention is that they assume
it was some massive feat of willpower. It was at first, but within a week or
so, I adopted a few strategies to make the whole process more efficient and
more enjoyable. Once you get the hang of it, consuming a typical popular
science book should take no more than a few hours (exceptions if the book is
either really good or really bad).
These are strategies anyone can use and require little
practice. You can be up to speed and doing this stuff within a week or two. It
will just take some conscious effort at first and a little bit of practice. For
the most part, these tips are practical and logical, not some
uber-speed-reading techniques.
But before we get into it, let’s start with a question:
| Read faster, Retain more |
“What is the purpose of reading?”
That sounds like a pretty stupid question. It’s so obvious
that few people bother to think about it. But why do we even read in the first
place?
The answer is the transmission of information. Written
language has the magical power of taking an idea from my brain and inserting it
into yours, regardless of space or time or whether we like each other or not.
But when we’re young, the purpose of reading is to learn
vocabulary and proper grammar. Therefore the way we’re taught to read when
we’re young is designed to do that efficiently, not necessarily transmit
information efficiently. What we have to do, as educated adults, is re-orient
the way we read to consume information and ideas efficiently. Grammar and
vocabulary are prerequisites for this, but not the ultimate purpose.
(Note: In the cases of good
fiction or poetry, it’s often not desirable to read the book as quickly as
possible, since the purpose of reading it is the artistic merit of the writing
itself. For this reason, in the case of extremely wellwritten non-fiction, or
when reading fiction or poetry for pleasure, I forgo most of these strategies.)
Step 1: Shut Off Your Inner Monologue
When we’re kids, we’re taught to read by sounding out every
letter and then every word. As we grow older, we continue to read through an
internal monologue in our head.
The problem is our eyes are capable of identifying words and
sentences much faster than our inner monologue can make sounds. The first step
to reading faster and more efficiently is to stop sounding out the words in
your head. This requires some degree of mindfulness and I actually think meditation
can help with this.
Mastering this, by itself, can
double or triple your reading speed within a few days. And when you do
encounter a piece of great writing (*cough* like mine *cough*) you can always
turn the monologue back on to really enjoy it. I have a handful of favorite
writers and bloggers that I always keep the monologue on for, because beyond
the information I simply enjoy their style of writing. But most of the time the
monologue goes off.
Step 2: Scan for Important words only
The other habit that is taught
in grade school that slows you down later is to pay attention to every word in
a sentence in order. But the mind has an amazing ability to fill gaps with
appropriate information. So we may as well take advantage of it.
Once
you get the hang of reading without sounding out every word in your head,
you’ll find yourself beginning to chunk groups of words together into larger
chunks of meaning. Instead of seeing “the” “cat” “was” “mad” separately, your
mind will register “the cat was mad” as one single piece of information. Once
that happens, certain chunks of words will stand out in paragraphs and your
eyes will just glide over the filler words without wasting time or energy on
their content.
For example,
this sentence, “In effect, the cat’s
biggest concern had not been the lack of food, but rather the demonstrated lack
of care by his owners.”
Will soon register as this, “Cat’s biggest concern — not lack of food —
but
— lack of care — owners.”
You get 90% of the meaning with about 50% of the words.
That’s 50%
of what’s actually written. But you’ll notice that the relationships between
those chunks are all already implied. In many cases the adjectives hint at the
action taking place and so reading the verbs is unnecessary as well.
Scanning paragraphs like this
takes practice. But this can double your reading speed yet again. And the
beauty is that if you scan through a paragraph and don’t completely grasp the
meaning, you just go back, slow down, and add the words back in until makes
sense. Then take off again.
Step 3: Read only first and last sentences of paragraphs
If we accept that the purpose of writing is to convey
information, and if we’re not reading something for the pleasure of the writing
itself, then it makes no sense to read any more words or sentences than are
necessary to convey the information. That means that there’s no reason to
continue reading sentences that describe a concept you already understand.
The fact of the matter is that most non-fiction is not
written well. It’s usually repetitive and long-winded. They’ll give example
after example of a simple concept you already understood. There’s no reason for
you to suffer through this. Especially if you’re a smart and selective reader.
Whenever I read an article, a section of a book, or a
chapter where I feel like I already have a decent understanding of the subject
matter and am merely looking for something new or something that stands out, I
will read only the first sentence of each paragraph. By design, paragraphs
introduce new ideas and new topics. And when you limit yourself to the first
sentence of each one, you’re limiting yourself to sentences that introduce each
idea in the piece of work. If I come across a sentence that piques my interest,
then I will go back and read the
entire paragraph or section. If I reach a point where I’ve lost track of what
the author is talking about, then, and only then, I will go back and read the
last few paragraphs until I’m caught up to speed, then I’ll move on.
Another option is to read only the first and last sentences
of each paragraph. It’s actually startling how much information you can pick up
just by doing this. Try it. Dig up a magazine article you’ve never read and go
through it reading only the first and last sentences of each paragraph. Only
read entire paragraphs if you don’t understand the first and last sentences.
Then go back and read the
whole thing beginning to end. Compare how much information you gained by doing
the latter. It’s likely not that much.
Step 4: Skip entire sections, chapters or Even the book itself
I’m amazed by how many people persist in reading crappy
books that they’re not learning anything from.
If you are consistently running into shitty ideas, things
you already know, or the book is just extremely repetitive (like most self-help
books), then just skip entire sections. Right now I’m reading Phil Jackson’s
new autobiography about being an NBA coach. He had an entire section of the
book about his interest in Native American rituals. I’m not interested in
Native American rituals, I’m interested in Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant. So I
skipped about four pages. I’m now halfway through the book and feel like I
missed out on absolutely nothing.
As for ditching a book entirely, I usually give any book 10%
before I decide whether to finish it or not. If it’s a 500 page book, I’ll give
it until 50 pages. If it’s 100 pages, it needs to grab me within 10 or so. If
it doesn’t grab me or I find I don’t respect the author, then before giving up
on it I’ll check the table of contents and skip to the chapter tha appeals to
me the most. If that chapter still doesn’t do it for me, then I put the book
down and don’t look back. I’d estimate that I end up putting down anywhere from
1/3 to 1/2 of the books that I start and never read any more than 10-20% of
them.
That may surprise some people.
But I’ve found that one really good book gives me the value and information of
34 crappy books. So there’s no sense on wasting my time on books that are not
transmitting the information I’m interested in.
Step 5: Relate any Important information to things you already know
When
you start to go through a lot of books, you become concerned that you’re not
retaining all of the information that you’re coming across. It feels weird
because you can’t consciously recall everything immediately. So sometimes it
feels like you read hundreds of pages for nothing. Sometimes you may feel the
urge to quiz yourself on what you just read. But then you’re basically just
replicating school all over again. And honestly, who remembers anything they
learned in school?
The way the brain is set up,
the majority of our memories will exist in our sub-conscious and only become
accessible in relevant contexts. Ever been in a conversation with somebody and
something they say suddenly sparks a memory you hadn’t thought about in years?
Yep. They’re down there. They just need to be associated with something useful
for them to come up.
This is why whenever you come across a new or useful idea,
take a moment to relate it to something you already know, understand or use.
Step 6: Highlight, bookmark, keep a database
But even then you won’t be able to remember everything, or
at least not accurately. So it’s important to be able to reference your
knowledge.
(Note: This is where it gets nerdy.)
I believe as a study tool itself, highlighting or
underlining is overrated if not useless. What it’s useful for is reference. I
highlight/underline all important facts or ideas that I want to be able to
reference in the future. If there’s a whole section that is important, I’ll
dog-ear the page down (with Kindle, you can just add a bookmark).
This won’t actually help you retain anything by itself. The
retention and usefulness comes from building a reference database of references.
When I finish a book, I go back and make notes on the parts
I highlighted and bookmarked. I then write a short 100-200 word summary of the
book and the points I took from it. This takes anywhere from five to 30
minutes. But it’s worth it. I also keep my database on Google Drive, so it’s
accessible anywhere (even on my phone).
Some people are really into mind mapping. I never really got
into them, but it’s the same concept.
I only do this with the best books that have important
information, not everything I read. I’d say only 1/3 of the books I read make
it into the database. But it’s been incredibly useful for me, especially in
regards to my business. And the best part is, it’s there forever. There are
books I read 10 years ago that I’m foggy on a lot of the specifics now. In 10
years, if I ever get foggy on Dabrowski’s theories, I can pull them up at any
time, at home, on a bus or train, waiting in line at the airport, and refresh
myself.
By Geocklyn
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