Six Reading Myths ©Academic Skills Center, Dartmouth
College 2001 MYTH
1: I HAVE TO READ EVERY WORD Many of the words used in writing
grammatically correct sentences actually convey no meaning. If, in reading, you exert as much effort in
conceptualizing these meaningless words as you do important ones, you limit
not only your reading speed but your comprehension as well. MYTH
2: READING ONCE IS ENOUGH Skim once as
rapidly as possible to determine the
main idea and to identify those parts that need careful reading. Reread more carefully to plug the gaps in
your knowledge. Many college
students fell that something must be wrong with their brain power if they
must read a textbook chapter more than once.
To be sure, there are students for whom one exposure to an idea in a
basic course is enough, but they either have read extensively or have an
excellent background or a high degree of interest in the subject. For most
students in most subjects, reading once is not enough. However, this is not to imply that an
unthinking Pavlovian-like rereading is necessary to
understand and retain materials. Many
students automatically regress or reread doggedly with a self-punishing
attitude. ("I didn't get a thing out of that paragraph the first time,
so if I punish myself by rereading it maybe I will this time.") This is
the hardest way to do it. Good reading is selective reading. It involves selecting those sections that
are relevant to your purpose in reading.
Rather than automatically rereading, take a few seconds to quiz
yourself on the material you have just read and then review those sections
that are still unclear or confusing to you. The most
effective way of spending each study hour is to devote as little time as
possible to reading and as much time as possible to testing yourself,
reviewing, organizing, and relating the concepts and facts, mastering the
technical terms, formulas, etc., and thinking of applications of the
concepts-in short, spend your time
learning ideas, not painfully processing words visually. MYTH
3: IT IS SINFUL TO SKIP PASSAGES IN READING Many college students feel that it is
somehow sinful to skip passages in reading and to read rapidly. We are not sure just how this attitude
develops, but some authorities have suggested that it stems from the days
when the Bible was the main book read, savored, and reread. Indeed, the educated person was one who
could quote long passages from these books from memory. Today
proliferation of books and printed matter brought about by the information
explosion creates a reading problem for everyone. Furthermore, much
of this printed material offers considerably less than Shakespeare or the
Bible in meaning or style. You must,
of course, make daily decisions as to what is worth spending your time on,
what can be glanced at or put aside for future perusal, and what can be
relegated to the wastebasket. The idea
that you cannot skip but have to read every page is old-fashioned. Children, however, are still taught to feel
guilty if they find a novel dull and out it down before finishing it. I once had a student who felt she could not
have books in her home unless she had read every one of them from cover to
cover. Studies show that this is the
reason many people drop Book-of-the-Month Club subscriptions; they begin to
collect books, cannot keep up with their reading, and develop guilty feelings
about owning books they have not had time to read. The idea
that some books are used merely for reference purposes and are nice to have
around in case you need them seems to be ignored in our schools. Sir Francis Bacon once said that some books
are to be nibbled and tasted, some are to be swallowed whole, and a few need
to be thoroughly chewed and digested no matter how trivial the content. No wonder many people dislike reading. MYTH
4: MACHINES ARE NECESSARY TO IMPROVE MY READING SPEED Nonsense! The best and most effective way to increase
your reading rate is to consciously force yourself to read faster. Machines are useful as motivators, but only
because they show you that you can read faster without losing understanding. Remember that they
are inflexible, unthinking devices that churn away at the same rate
regardless of whether the sentence is trivial or vital, simple or
difficult. They are limited too, for
if you are practicing skimming, you are looking for main ideas so that you
can read more carefully. Since these
may not be located in a definite pattern (e.g. one per line) nor be equally
spaced so that the machine can conveniently time them, machines may actually
slow you down and retard the speed with which you locate the ideas that you
need for understanding. If you find yourself in need of a pusher, use a 3x5 card
as a pacer, or use your hand, or your finger.
However, there is one caution you should observe if you try this. Be sure that your hand or finger or card is
used to push, not merely to follow your eyes. MYTH
5: IF I SKIM OR READ TOO RAPIDLY MY COMPREHENSION WILL DROP Many people refuse to push themselves
faster in reading for fear that they will lose comprehension. However, research shows that there is
little relationship between rate and comprehension. Some students read rapidly and comprehend well, others read slowly and comprehend poorly. Whether you have good comprehension depends
on whether you can extract and retain the important ideas from your reading,
not on how fast you read. If you can do this, you can also increase
your speed. If you "clutch
up" when trying to read fast or skim and worry
about your comprehension, it will drop because your mind is occupied with
your fears and you are not paying attention to the ideas that you are
reading. If you
concentrate on your purpose for reading -- e.g. locating main ideas and
details, and forcing yourself to stick to the task of finding them quickly --
both your speed and comprehension could increase. Your concern should be not with how fast
you can get through a chapter, but with how quickly you can locate the facts
and ideas that you need. MYTH
6: THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT MY EYES THAT KEEPS ME FROM READING FAST This belief is nonsense too, assuming
that you have good vision or wear glasses that correct your eye
problems. Of course, if you cannot
focus your eyes at the reading distance, you will have trouble learning to
skim and scan. Furthermore, if you
have developed the habit of focusing your eyes too narrowly and looking at
word parts, it will be harder for you to learn to
sweep down a page of type rapidly. Usually it is
your brain, not your eyes, that slows you down in
reading. Your eyes are capable of
taking in more words than your brain is used to processing. If you sound out words as you read, you
will probably read very slowly and have difficulty in skimming and scanning
until you break this habit. |