Monday 31 August 2015

5 youtubes covering various aspects of the main idea in written material.

Yellow flag.

Main idea. Part 1 Topic V Main idea. Identify the topic and then the main idea.
Main idea. Part 2 Of a sentence. How do you understand an implied Main idea?
Main Idea. Part 3 In longer reading material. Main ideas in paragraphs and essays.
Main idea. Identifying Topic & Main Idea in Lectures. [Test 57 -  TOEFL Listening Practice]

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Friday 28 August 2015

These 7 tips can help you back off and be even more productive.

Water aven aka Grandmother's bonnet.

These 7 tips can help you back off and be even more productive.
Bruna Martinuzzi

If your brain is always working overtime to make it through your never-ending to-do list,
it may be time to give it a rest.  

Do you ever feel overwhelmed just thinking about all you have to do?
Do you find yourself snapping at others who seem to be too laid back?
Have you given up too many things that you used to enjoy because you're too focused on work?
You may be a victim of mental fatigue.

Mental fatigue is the result of brain over-activity. It can happen when you expend
too much mental effort on a project or task. You may pride yourself on your laser-focusing ability, spending long hours on a task, day in and day out.
But every strength, taken to the extreme, becomes a liability.
Your overdrive eventually catches up with you, and you deplete your mental gas tank.
The result is mental fatigue.

Research shows that mental fatigue results in an inability to concentrate
and an increase in simple mistakes.
Unchecked, mental fatigue leads to feeling stressed, irritated that you can't keep up
and even depressed. What's more, being in a state of mental fatigue not only affects
your well-being, it also spills over into your interactions with family and others you associate with.
It's draining for them to be around someone who is continuously mentally exhausted. 

If you think you may be mentally fatigued, here are seven tips to help you prevent and combat it.

1. Stop Low-Yield Activities
Be ruthless about how you spend your time. Instead of mindlessly moving from one task to the next, focus on activities that grow your business. Stop burning away hours reading Facebook updates
or answering useless emails. Instead, keep those activities for a scheduled, timed break,
then move away to something more worthwhile. Don't meet with acquaintances who want to get together for coffee—these are often people who have time to waste and want to waste it with you. 

Use the time you've saved to learn new things, and pursue activities that increase your well-being and the quality of your life. Focus on strengthening your bonds with family, friends and associates. Do what fuels your mind and fills your heart. If you rescue wasted time consistently
over the course of a year, you'll be richer for it and will feel more energized.

2. Use the Timebox Technique
Timebox is a term that originated in the software development industry.
It's defined as a period of time during which a task must be accomplished.
Entrepreneurs like Steve Pavlina use timeboxing as a way to manage work projects.
Because timeboxing forces you to limit the time you allot to certain tasks that run the risk
of taking far more time than they're worth, it counteracts any perfectionist approaches
to the wrong tasks and ensures that you do the best job you can within a set time frame.

3. Try Focus@Will
Focus@Will is a music service that's based on the latest research in neuroscience.
The selected music helps you focus, reduce distractions and retain information.
As the company behind this intersection of art and science explains,
most people can only concentrate for about 100 continuous minutes:
"The focus@will system makes it easier for you to get into the concentration flow,
and then keeps you there. It works in the background by subtly soothing the part of your brain,
the limbic system, that's always on the lookout for danger, food, sex or shiny things."

By staying focused, you can get more done in a shorter amount of time,
so you can free up more time and reduce your chances of mental fatigue.
Entrepreneur Sean Ogle described the program as "magic."
You can try it out for free for 30 days and see what happens.

4. Be Kind to Your Eyes
Staring at a computer for long hours while you work causes eye fatigue, which can tire you out
and negatively affect your ability to focus. Fortunately, there are many things you can do
to avoid this. For example, every once in a while, look away from your computer screen
and focus on distant objects or take a minute to stare out the window.
Also, lower the brightness of your monitor—research shows that when you lower the brightness,
the reduction in your ability to focus drops by half and you feel less fatigued.

Check out "How to Combat Eye Fatigue Right Now" for other ideas.
If you have employees, also consider the computer workstations advice 
published by the Occupational Health and Safety Administration.

5. Don Your Sneakers
Research reported in Science Daily reveals that a bout of exercise
makes the brain more resistant to fatigue. According to the study, "These findings could lead
to the enhancement of athletic performance through reduced mental and physical fatigue."
What works for athletes can also work for you.

6. Learn to Do Nothing Once in a While
We're a nation of doers—continuously on the go, rushing from meeting to meeting,
project to project. Even when we're on vacation, a large number among us spends more time
surfing the Internet rather than surfing the waves.
John Lennon once said, "Everybody seems to think I'm lazy. I don't mind, I think they're crazy. Running everywhere at such a speed, till they find there's no need.”
Planning for a little idleness in your week is a smart move if you're trying to refresh your spirit—
it's a powerful antidote to mental fatigue.

7. Reduce Your Sleep Debt
Sleep debt is the difference between the amount of sleep you should be getting
and the amount you actually get.
It's not uncommon for professionals to miss several hours of sleep for a few days in a row.
This is a sure-fire way to invite mental fatigue.

Research shows, on average, Americans lose one hour of sleep each night—more than
two full weeks of slumber every year. This has a negative impact on our health.
As the research shows, you can't train yourself to be a "short sleeper."
What's more, a study found that the more tired you get, the less tired you feel,
which makes you think you're not shorting yourself.
It's time to earn back your lost sleep: Make it a practice to go to bed when you're tired
and give your body the rest it needs so you can stop mental fatigue in its tracks. 

"The energy of the mind is the essence of life," Aristotle said. Energy is everything. Mental fatigue saps us of our most precious life energy. These seven strategies will help you guard against this.

 https://www.americanexpress.com/us/small-business/openforum/articles/7-secrets-preventing-mental-fatigue/

You can TCR specialist and language dictionaries that are spontaneously accessed.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Thursday 27 August 2015

‘Teachers hit out at teacher training’… or do they?

Yellow flag like moist ground these are growing on the verge of a swampy old canal.

‘Teachers hit out at teacher training’… or do they?

An article in the Sunday Times quotes Katie Ashford and my thoughts on Initial Teacher Training (ITT) in the UK. This follows a speech that we gave at Wellington Festival of Education in June,
in which we argued that it is the ideas in education that contribute to the attainment gap.
We are disappointed with the article because it fails to recognise the many positive things
that Katie and I think and have said about Teach First. Both of us believe that Teach First
is an excellent organisation. As I have said before, evidence suggests that Teach First is working,
and that it has contributed to a shift in the perception of the teaching profession among graduates. And we are not alone in thinking that.
In 2011, Ofsted rated Teach First training as outstanding in 44 categories out of 44.
Nevertheless, Katie and I think teacher training can still improve.
I could do a lot improve my teaching. Katie could do a lot to improve hers.
Both of us are focused on getting better. Teach First shares our desire to learn,
and is always willing to listen to and act on feedback from participants and ambassadors.
One of the things that Katie and I find most refreshing about Teach First is the willingness
 to have a dialogue about what it could do to improve as a training provider.
We, and many other Teach First ambassadors, often have the opportunity to express our opinions and offer constructive suggestions. Teach First are continually making changes to the programme, aiming to prepare participants as well as possible to start in teaching.
For our part, we will continue to work towards closing the research-practice gap in ITT.

https://pragmaticreform.wordpress.com/2014/07/06/or-do-they/

You can TCR software and engineering manuals for spontaneously recall – or pass that exam.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube  
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Wednesday 26 August 2015

Basic English Grammar - Noun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb

Repairing a bridge over the river Cam in Cambridge. UK


Basic English Grammar - Noun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb
EnglishLessons4U - Learn English with Ronnie! [engVid]
What is a noun? What is a verb? What is an adjective?
AHHHHH!!! Learn how to recognize nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs
in this important basic grammar lesson. Then test yourself with the quiz

For a very different presentation check this out.

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com      just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Tuesday 25 August 2015

Why Reading Strategies Usually Don't Help the Better Readers

Purple vetch and Lady's slipper.

Why Reading Strategies Usually Don't Help the Better Readers

Last week, I explained why disciplinary reading strategies are superior
to the more general strategies taught in schools. That generated a lot of surprised responses.

Some readers thought I’d mis-worded my message. Let me reiterate it here:
strategies like summarization, questioning (the readers asking questions), 
monitoring, and visualizing don’t help average or better readers. 
They do help poor readers and younger readers.

I didn’t explain better readers don’t benefit, so let me do that here.

Readers read strategically only when they have difficulty making sense of a text.
Recently, I was took a second shot at reading the novel, Gilead. I tried to read it a few months ago, but couldn’t follow the plot. I often read just before sleep and especially subtle or deep texts
are not usually best read a few pages at a time like that.

In the meantime, Cyndie read it with great enjoyment, so now my self-image as
a sophisticated reader was on the line. For my second reading, I carved out bigger chunks of time, and marked the text up quite a bit (even writing a summary of the first several chapters).
This time, I read with great understanding. Whew!

If the book had been easy for me, I never would have gone to that kind of trouble.

Let’s face it: school texts are not particularly hard for average readers and above.
We teach strategies to them, but they don’t really need them—
at least not with the texts we use to teach reading.

It may not even matter much if a student understands a text. Students can often hide out,
letting the others answer the hard questions, and gaining sufficient info from the discussions
and illustrations. No need for strategies under such circumstances.

The new emphasis on teaching students with more challenging texts—texts not as likely
to be understood from reading alone—should increase the value of general reading strategies.

Of course, even good readers sometimes confront challenging texts at school (like ninth grade biology textbooks). Unfortunately, they often don’t use reading strategies even with such texts.

My guess as to what is going on is two-fold: students who usually get by on the basis of language proficiency alone, have no idea what to do when confronted with such demands.
They go into default mode, not using the strategies at all—even though in this context
such strategies would probably be helpful.

But let’s face it. Too often, meaning just doesn’t matter at school. Students can often get by
with a superficial purchase on the content. I once got half credit on an astronomy exam question that asked how to measure the distance to the Northern Lights (my answer: use the same method that you’d use to measure the distance to the moon—a correct answer,
and yet one that doesn’t require any grasp of the content).

Superficial understanding is often enough in school. Low readers may not be able to gain
this successfully by applying their language skills alone, so strategies increase their chances.
Good readers can, but when the stakes are raised they don’t necessarily adjust and start using
the general reading strategies. But no matter how challenging the texts are, if “acceptable levels”
of performance are low enough, strategies again won’t be necessary.

Yes, we should teach reading comprehension strategies, even to good readers.
But we should do so in an environment that emphasizes the value of knowledge and understanding,
and that requires students to confront genuine intellectual challenges. Those disciplinary literacy strategies touted in my last entry seem to have motivation built in: trying to connect the graphics and the prose in science to figure out how a process works; or judging the veracity
of multiple documents in history; or determining which protagonist an author is most sympathetic

to in literature tend to be more purposeful and intellectually engaging than turning headers into questions or summarizing the author’s message. 

Shanahan on Literacy http://www.shanahanonliteracy.com/

You can TCR specialist and language dictionaries that are spontaneously accessed.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
 www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com              take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”   

Monday 24 August 2015

The Lost Art of Memory: Moonwalking with Einstein

Thyme.

The Lost Art of Memory: Moonwalking with Einstein

Dominic O’Brien failed his O levels and left school aged 16.
Not long after, he saw someone memorise a pack of cards in under three minutes.
With discipline, effort and bucketloads of practice, he beat the record
and became the first and eight-times World Memory Champion.
Memory comes down to desire and 2,500 year-old techniques.’

Ben Pridmore can permanently remember what happened on 96 historical dates in 5 minutes. 
‘It’s all about understanding how memory works.’

Ed Cooke can remember 99 names and faces in 15 minutes. ’My memory is quite average.
But even average memories are remarkably powerful if used properly.’

Joshua Foer covered the World Memory Championships in 2005 as a journalist.
Fascinated, he decided to enter in 2006: ‘I didn’t have a clue how my own memory worked.
Perhaps the best way to understand human memory would be to try very hard to optimise it.’ 
His book about it is called Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering.
This blogpost is about what he learned.
  
Memory, marginalised 
‘Once upon a time, memory was at the root of all culture: remembering was everything.
Only through memorizing could ideas be truly incorporated into the mind.
Techniques existed to etch into the brain foundational texts and ideas.
Athenian Themistocles could remember the names of all 20,000 Athenians.
Roman orators like Cicero argued that the art of memory and an inventory of knowledge was a vital instrument for the invention of new ideas. Orthodox Jews memorized all 5,422 pages of the Talmud so that when a pin was stuck through it, they could tell which words it passed through on every page. Memory training was considered a centerpiece of classical education on par with grammar,
logic and rhetoric. Students were not just taught what to remember, but how to remember it.
In a world with few books, memory was sacrosanct. King Cyrus could name all the soldiers
in his army. Scipio knew all the names of the Roman people. The Greek scholar Charmadas
recited the contents of any volume in libraries that people asked him to recite. Seneca could repeat two thousand names in the order they were given to him. Ad Herrenium calls memory the
*treasure house of inventions* with two components: images and places. Images represent
the contents of what one wishes to remember, places, where those images are stored.

‘A trained memory was the key to cultivating judgement and citizenship. What one memorised shaped one’s character. Memory training was seen as a form of character building. Oral poetry
was a massive repository of useful knowledge, a sort of encyclopaedia of ethics, politics, history
and technology which each citizen was required to learn as the core of his educational equipment.

‘Over the last millennia, we’ve gradually accumulated a vast superstructure of external memory
that has sped up exponentially in recent years. Literature, music, law, politics, history, science, maths: our culture is an edifice built of externalized memories. There’s more to remember than ever before.

‘How did memory end up so marginalised? Why did these techniques disappear?
How did our culture end up forgetting how to remember?

‘Once upon a time, with no alphabet or paper, anything that had to be preserved
had to be preserved in memory. Any story, idea or insight had to be remembered.

‘Today, it often seems we remember very little. Books and the internet store information;
calendars remembers our schedules; GPS supplants our spatial memory; phones displant numbers
of friends and family. Gadgets have eliminated the need to remember such things any more. Amnesiacs, we don’t remember what we read – or sometimes, whether we’ve read it.
Our everyday memories have atrophied and we’ve become estranged from disciplined memory.’
Turbo Charged Reading can address long term memory of what you’ve read.

By 2006, Josh Foer had delved deep into the lost art of memory, expended enormous effort
in training his mind, dived into the scientific literature, and had himself neuroscientifically tested
by the world expert on experts, K. Anders Ericsson. He entered the US Memory Championship.
This involved:
15 minutes to remember 99 names and faces;
15 minutes to remember a 100-line poem;
5 minutes to memorise as many events and their dates as possible
5 minutes to memorise the order of 99 2-digit numbers;
3 minutes to memorise the order of a pack of playing cards;
5 minutes to remember 10 pieces of information from 5 strangers,
including names, hobbies, favourite foods and birthdays.
That year, at the dizzying speed of 1 minute 40 seconds for 52 cards,
Josh won the US memory contest.

So what?
Over the year and in his book, he recorded what he’d learned.

1. Memory is domain-specific
 Chess masters still forget names, and memory champions still lose their keys:
‘I could recall more lines of poetry, speeches, more people’s names.
The paradox was, I was still stuck with the same old shoddy memory that misplaced my car keys.
My working memory was still as limited by the same constraints as everyone else.
We tend to think of memory as monolithic; it’s actually a collection of independent modules.
Some people have good memories for names, but not numbers.

Memory is not an all-purpose skill, but linked to content via schemata.
As teachers, we need to carefully select what we want students to remember –
and it’s not 52 cards in 5 minutes or random sequences of digits – it’s meaningful subject content.

2. Deliberate practice is the only route to improvement 
‘My experience had validated that practice makes perfect,
but only if it’s the right kind of concentrated, deliberate practice.’

‘Amateur musicians are more likely to spend more of their time playing music,
whereas pros are more likely to spend time on exercises and drills and focus on specific,
difficult parts of pieces. *How you spend your time practicing is far more important
than the amount of time you spend*. The single best predictor of an individual’s chess skill
is not the amount of chess he’s played, but the amount of time he’s spent alone working through
old games. Surgeons don’t plateau because they get instant feedback on operations.’

Practice can be made more deliberate by setting goals, getting feedback and tracking scores.

3. Cues make things memorable 
‘Our minds seem built to remember spaces and images. The point of memory techniques
is to take the kinds of memories that our brains aren’t good at holding on to and change them
into the kinds of memories our brains were built for. Take something unmemorable and convert it
to a series of visual images mentally arranged within an imagined space,
and suddenly forgettable items become unforgettable.’

‘Make it visual, concrete, outlandish, animate, dynamic, anthropormorphised, vivid, unusual, unexpected, unique, distinct, bizarre, striking, detailed, attention-grabbing,
sensory (smell & taste) – make it durable’.

 In teaching…












Cognitive scientist Gregory Yates and evidence-based educationalist John Hattie review Moonwalking With Einstein in their book The Science of Learning and come to this conclusion:


There are two implications I see for teachers.
The first is to ask, what exactly do we want pupils to remember? 
The second is to ask, how do we help them remember it?

In English, I want my students to remember quotations and who said them;
events and the dates they happened; as well as how to analyse complex texts and connect them
to their contexts. I’d like to help them remember poems and Shakespearian speeches off by heart. I’d like them to remember their own speeches without notes.
Just as Cicero and Shakespeare were expected at school to memorise sententiae (wise sayings),
I’d like them to remember aphorisms and words of wisdom from the ages.

How do I become a high-mnemonic teacher? I could teach my pupils how memory works,
and help them understand how to remember better than before. I could embed revisiting so that we’re always reviewing material they’ve memorised, not just in revision season but throughout the year. 
I could teach them how to create their own striking, vivid, unusual cues for subject content.

As Josh, Ed, Ben and Dominic reveal, you can remember anything you set your mind to.

https://pragmaticreform.wordpress.com/2014/04/19/moonwalking-with-einstein/


You can TCR software and engineering manuals for spontaneously recall – or pass that exam.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube  
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com              take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Sunday 23 August 2015

Basic English Grammar - Noun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb

Self-heal 'heals' the plants around it.

Janet Bagwell
Topic vs. Main Idea
Topic vs. Main Idea vs. Supporting Detail.
Stated Main Idea in Paragraphs.
Implied Main Idea in Paragraphs.
Long Reading Selection
Summary.

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Saturday 22 August 2015

John Maxwell on the Importance of Books

 Sainfoin.



Books can form you.
An excellent list of books.

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.

Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
 www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com     just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Friday 21 August 2015

How to Read

Larkspur.

How to Read
by  BRIAN CLARK
Turbo Charged Reading points in purple.

Who needs to learn how to read?
After all, we all learned how to read fairly early in life, usually in elementary school, right?
But do you know how to really read?
More importantly, are you really reading?
Reading can make you a better writer, as long as you’re paying attention and leaving time
to actually write. But what we’re talking about here is what you say, rather than how you say it.
If you haven’t noticed, competition in the world of online content is fierce.
Anyone playing to win is searching high and low for information that others don’t have,
which for many means subscribing to a ridiculous number of RSS feeds.
While seeking out novel information from a wide variety of sources is admirable,
it doesn’t necessarily give you an advantage. The ancient Greeks had a label
for those who were widely read but not well read—they called them sophomores.
As in sophomoric… not a second-year college student
(I suppose there’s not really much of a distinction).

Scanners and Pleasure Seekers
We know that people don’t read well online. They ruthlessly scan for interesting chunks
of information rather than digesting the whole, and they want to be entertained in the process.
This is the reality that online publishers deal with,
so we disguise our nuggets of wisdom with friendly formatting and clever analogies.
But that doesn’t mean you should read that way.
If you’ve been publishing online for even a small amount of time, you’ve seen someone
leave a comment that clearly demonstrates they didn’t read or understand the content.
Even more painful is when someone writes a responsive post that clearly misses
the entire point of the original article.
While it happens to us all from time to time, you do not want to consistently be one of these people. Credibility is hard enough to establish without routinely demonstrating that you fail to grasp a topic you’ve chosen to write about, whether in an article or a comment.
Plus, if you’re doing nothing but scanning hundreds of RSS feeds
and reading purely to be entertained, you’re at a disadvantage. Someone in your niche
or industry is likely reading books and reading deeper to become the higher authority.
Or they will after they read this article.

Information vs. Understanding
People often think of learning as an information-gathering and retention process.
But being able to recall and regurgitate information is low-level learning
compared with insightful understanding.
Bloggers are big on regurgitation. These cut-and-paste creatives add value to the world
through a mash-up of sources, right? Maybe, but without the ability to understand
and communicate what it all means for the reader, you’re simply passing on
your reading obligations to others, and that’s not giving people what they look for in a publication.
On the other hand, if you understand everything you read upon a casual once over,
are you truly learning anything new? The material that gives you an edge in the insight department is the stuff that’s harder to understand. In other words, the writer is your superior when it comes
to that particular subject matter, and it’s your job to close the expertise gap by reading well.
You do that by moving beyond learning by instruction, and increasing your true understanding by discovery. For example, you read a challenging book full of great information,
and you understand enough of it to know that you don’t understand all of it.
At that point, you can dive into the book again and read more carefully.
You can go to supplemental resources. You can read other books. All that matters is you do the work rather than asking someone, and I guarantee you’re really learning in the process.
For example, next time you read a challenging blog post and you’re not clear on a point,
your first inclination might be to ask a question in the comments. Instead, read the post again.
If it’s still not clear, go do some research on your own to see if you can figure it out.
Then when you finally do ask a question, you’re on an entirely different level of understanding
and can likely engage in a meaningful dialogue with the author.
Instruction is important and beneficial.
But true understanding comes from your own exploration and discovery along the path.

The Four Levels of Reading
Back in 1940, a guy named Mortimer J. Adler jolted the “widely read” into realizing
they might not be well read with a book called How to Read a Book.
Updated in 1973 and still going strong today, How to Read a Book identifies four levels of reading:
Elementary
Inspectional
Analytical
Synoptically
Each of these reading levels is cumulative.
You can’t progress to a higher level without mastering the levels that come before.

1.       Elementary Reading – Aptly named, elementary reading consists of remedial literacy,
and it’s usually achieved during the elementary schooling years. Sadly, many high schools and colleges must offer remedial reading courses to ensure that elementary reading levels are maintained, but very little instruction in advanced reading is offered.
2.       Inspectional Reading – Scanning and superficial reading are not evil,
as long as approached as an active process that serves an appropriate purpose.
Inspectional reading means giving a piece of writing a quick yet meaningful advance
review in order to evaluate the merits of a deeper reading experience.

There are two types:

Skimming: This is the equivalent of scanning a blog post to see if you want to read it carefully.
You’re checking the title, the subheads, 
and you’re selectively dipping in and out of content
to gauge interest. The same can be done with a book—go beyond the dust jacket
and peruse the table of contents and each chapter, 
but give yourself a set amount of time to do it.

Superficial: Superficial reading is just that… you simply read. You don’t ponder,
and you don’t stop to look things up. If you don’t get something, you don’t worry about it.
You’re basically priming yourself to read again at a higher level if the subject matter is worthy.
Stopping at inspectional reading is only appropriate if you find no use for the material.
Unfortunately, this is all the reading some people do in preparation for their own writing.

3.       Analytical Reading – At this level of reading, you’ve moved beyond superficial reading
and mere information absorption. You’re now engaging your critical mind to dig down
into the meaning and motivation beyond the text.
To get a true understanding of a book, you would:
Identify and classify the subject matter as a whole
Divide it into main parts and outline those parts
Define the problem(s) the author is trying to solve
Understand the author’s terms and key words
Grasp the author’s important propositions
Know the author’s arguments
Determine whether the author solves the intended problems
Show where the author is uninformed, misinformed, illogical or incomplete
You’ll note that the inspectional reading you did perfectly sets the stage for an analytical reading. But so far, we’re talking about reading one book. The highest level of reading allows you to synthesize knowledge from a comparative reading of several books about the same subject.

4.       Syntopical Reading – It’s been said that anyone can read five books on a topic 
      and be an expert. That may be true, 
      but how you read those five books will make all the difference.
If you read those five books analytically,
you will become an expert on what five authors have said.
If you read five books syntopically,
you will develop your own unique perspective and expertise in the field.
In other words, syntopical reading is not about the existing experts.
It’s about you and the problems you’re trying to solve, in this case for your own readers.
In this sense, the books you read are simply tools that allow you to form an understanding
that’s never quite existed before. You’ve melded the information in those books with your own life experience and other knowledge to make novel connections and new insights.
You, my friend, are now an expert in your own right.
Here are the five steps to syntopical reading:

Inspection: Inspectional reading is critical to syntopical reading. You must quickly indentify
which five (or 15) books you need to read from a sea of unworthy titles.
Then you must also quickly identify the relevant parts and passages that satisfy your unique focus.

Assimilation: In analytical reading, you identify the author’s chosen language
by spotting the author’s terms of art and key words. This time, you assimilate the language
of each author into the terms of art and key words that you choose,
whether by agreeing with the language of one author or devising your own terminology.

Questions: This time, the focus is on what questions you want answered (problems solved),
as opposed to the problems each author wants to solve. This may require that you draw inferences
if any particular author does not directly address one of your questions.
If any one author fails to address any of your questions, you messed up at the inspection stage.

Issues: When you ask a good question, you’ve identified an issue. When experts have differing
or contradictory responses to the same question, you’re able to flesh out all sides of an issue,
based on the existing literature. When you understand multiple perspectives
within an individual issue, you can intelligently discuss the issue,
and come to your own conclusion (which may differ from everyone else,
thereby expanding the issue and hopefully adding unique value).

Conversation: Determining the “truth” via syntopical reading is not really the point,
since disagreements about truth abound with just about any topic. The value is found
within the discussion among competing viewpoints concerning the same root information,
and you’re now conversant enough to hold your own in a discussion of experts.
This is what the “online conversation” was supposed to look like according to early bloggers,
and sometimes, it does. But mostly, the online conversation looks like the unqualified, unsubstantiated opinions of the ill-informed, and you’re not looking to be part of that scene.

Be a Demanding Reader for the Win
Reading, at its fundamental essence, is not about absorbing information. It’s about asking questions, looking for answers, understanding the various answers, and deciding for yourself.
Think of reading this way, and you quickly realize how this allows you to deliver
unique value to your readers as a publisher.
If you think all of this sounds like a lot of work, well… you’re right. And most people won’t do it,
just like most people will never blog or publish online in the first place.
That’s why your readers need you. They need you to do the work for them,
because they don’t want to become an expert. So, it’s your job to understand
the complex and grasp the essentials, then make it simple, easy to read, and entertaining.
You’re on it, right?
Comments:
WORLD TRAVELING ARTIST
As people won’t learn to read online properly any time soon,
we’ve got to stick to a several researches that point to the fact that the most important information should be placed at the upper middle part of the screen.
SIMON
I’d not heard of “How to read a book” – thanks a lot for bringing it to my/our attention
Skim reading without duly taking in the context or argument is something that I’ve been consciously guilty of for some time. I’ve largely failed in my attempts to remedy it so far, but this offers some great tips. When I prune my reading list to be able to concentrate more on my core areas of interest,
ULTIMATE BLOGGING EXPERIMENT
Just reading other blog posts can make you a better writer.
I try to explain that to my readers all the time.
 “Plus, if you’re doing nothing but scanning hundreds of RSS feeds and reading purely
to be entertained, you’re at a disadvantage. Someone in your niche or industry
is likely reading books and reading deeper to become the higher authority.”
It’s what I’ve been trying to get across myself–that bloggers who regularly read books
written by accomplished authorities and experts will become better writers (
both in style and substance) than bloggers who only read blogs.
And:
“But being able to recall and regurgitate information is low-level learning
compared with insightful understanding.
Bloggers are big on regurgitation.”All of us bloggers know this, whether we’ll admit it or not.
Nice explanation of The Four Levels of Reading.
I used Level 2: Inspectional Reading to read it. It looks like it “merits…a deeper reading experience” so I’m going to reread it on Level 3.
Really good, substantive, thought-provoking post.
JOEL MARK WITT
I know that I get overwhelmed with the bulk of information online. I think that we oftentimes swap great books and “deeper” reading material for quick blog posts and even twitter feeds.
Those that are succeeding in online publishing master the fundamentals you’ve laid out.
FRANCIS ABLOLA
Very true…to be a better writer, even a direct response copywriter, you must become an avid reader. Reading fiction novels develop story telling skills and stories draw people into reading sales letters.
“How To Read A Book” is a must. I first picked up a copy when the self-help guru Jim Rohn mentioned it at one of his seminars.
NIMIC
This article expertly highlights the differences between being well read and being well, read.
The amount of cutting and pasting in the world of blogs, and even in real life is maddening.
I recently wrote an article on Fight Club on my blog. In addition to my readers, I showed it to
a bunch of friends and family members. Not one of them understood what the movie was about. Hint: It’s not about crazy people blowing stuff up.
Basically, with any media, I feel that most people have become sophomoric, in that they consume the information, regurgitate quotes and viewpoints, but never truly understand anything.
LIBBY
Enjoyed this post very much! It’s easy to get overloaded with RSS feeds and therefore skim
more than analyze and truly digest.
WRITER DAD
I loved this, and I couldn’t agree more. There was an article I READ a while back,
I think it was called “Is Google Making Us Stupid.” It was about how we’re all turning into
robotic scanners. When we’re online, we swallow without chewing. At about my third week
of posting, I realized that I was scanning a LOT of content. I’m a reader first, writer second.
I didn’t want to swallow without chewing. Even more, I didn’t want people doing that to me.
From the moment on, I treated every post as something my children would one day read.
It’s made all the difference.
There are A lot more comments
http://www.copyblogger.com/how-to-read/



You can TCR specialist and language dictionaries that are spontaneously accessed.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com             take advantage of business experience and expertise.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”