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10 Days to Faster Reading | 
enlarge | Authors: Abby Marks-beale, The Princeton Language Institute Publisher: Grand Central Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $11.95 Buy New: $6.02 You Save: $5.93 (50%)
New (33) Collectible (1) from $6.02
Avg. Customer Rating: 19 reviews Sales Rank: 31017
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0446676675 Dewey Decimal Number: 428.432 EAN: 9780446676670 ASIN: 0446676675
Publication Date: July 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 4 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Few left in stock - order soon. Code: H20081010205928T
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Product Description Speed reading used to require months of training. Now you can rev up your reading in just a few minutes a day. With quizzes to determine your present reading level and exercises to quickly introduce new skills, this book is a must for anyone feeling pressed for time.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 14 more reviews...
definite improvement, but not 600 wpm August 22, 2008 This book helped me eliminate many poor reading habits like regression and reading every word. I improved from 200 wpm to about 315 wpm, which is great. It's just not 600 wpm like some of these reviews said they experienced after reading this book.
But even still, I strongly recommend this book.
It worked for me August 18, 2008 10 Days to Faster Reading was definitely worthwhile reading. I am not afraid to read and consider myself a quick reader. To my surprise, reading at my normal pace, I was only at 265 WPM. This is quite average. I know that I can read fast when I have to, but I never had any strategies to follow and found myself just thumbing through the pages, retaining no information.
10 Days introduced me to multiple methods for reading faster, a few of which seem to work well with me: using a pacer, keywords/key phrases, and previewing. My WPM is now well over 450. And that is after only 10 days, with much improved accuracy.
The only drawback to this book is that it provide a large amount of information over a relatively short time frame. I will remember what worked for me right away, but probably will not remember enough to try out some of the other techniques that take longer to learn.
Good Sale August 10, 2008 The book arrived in the estimated time and in the condition advertised by this seller.
Stick to it, and you'll see results May 16, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Ten days ago I started following the day by day lesson plan of a little book called 10 Days to Faster Reading, by Abby Marks-Beale and the Princeton Language Institute. The original post can be found here. The purpose of the book is pretty well summed up in the title. Yesterday, I finished the program.
So, William, are you a faster reader now than you were before you started? The short answer is yes; significantly. The long answer is a bit more complicated.
The Book
I'm generally not a fan of books that make huge promises and claims in the title (i.e., Your Best Life Now). I always expect them to read like an inaudible infomercial. "In only fifteen-minutes a day, you could be on your way to so much money you'll want to puke!" The cover of our current book, while modest in its design (purple, white and black), reads in a manner that's difficult not to hear in the voice from the guy on the Oxy Clean commercials. If you can't tell, self-help type books don't generally sit well with me. However, despite my judging this book by its cover, it proved itself in its pages.
The book stays largely academic; something I appreciate. Where many books in its genre sound something like a hokey life coach speaking, this one sounds more like a patient, caring school teacher. The book is divided evenly into ten chapters. The chapters generally focus on breaking old habits and forming new ones. Each chapter includes a benchmark to test your speed and comprehension. Each day introduces you to some new techniques to help build speed and comprehension and encourages you to practice those techniques, then of course to try the techniques you're comfortable with on the next benchmark.
The beginning of the book focuses mostly on the bad habits we form when we first learn to read. Marks-Beale gives some helpful advice for breaking those habits; advice which I will attest is surprisingly effective. Things such as not reading to yourself out loud or in your head; that one I found especially effective. As she presents some helpful hints for breaking those habits, she also offers some useful techniques to replace those habits. Pacers, key-wording, reading between the lines, are among them.
Toward the end of the book, she starts to move away a bit from the academic topic and more into, what feels sometimes, like out of place life advice. For example, how to prepare for a board meeting you weren't ready for or how to determine what emails you should and shouldn't read. Per Ms. Marks-Beale's advice, I skipped these sections altogether.
My Experience
On day one, I was reading at 185 words per minute, at 70% comprehension (technically a slow reader). Newly aware of my bad habits and actively trying to implement good habits, by day two, I was up to 220 words per minute with 90% comprehension (just barely making the cut as an "average" reader.) Clearly by the second day I was seeing results. Throughout the program, I fluctuated with my speed and comprehension because of experimenting with different techniques, but finally I ended at 345 words per minute with 70% comprehension (finally a "good" reader). At nearly twice my original reading speed, I'd say that the program was a wild success.
Each chapter Marks-Beale shares a new "pacer" method to help speed up your reading. Of the many offered, I felt the most comfortable using the white card method. The idea is to use an index card to keep track of where you're reading. The only difference here is instead of placing it, in the traditional way, under the words your reading, she suggests placing it above the words your reading. This helped stop me from rereading things I'd already read. It also helped stop me from day dreaming.
Another technique she suggested was to read between the lines. As ridiculous as it sounds, it ends up working shockingly well. Much of the idea of speed reading comes from the thought that we can read word chucks, not just words. Every time our eyes stop, our mind picks up information. The more information you can pick up on one stop, the faster you can read; it's reading with your peripheral vision. Reading between the lines is literally just that. Instead of placing your eyes directly on the words you're reading, look right above them at the white space. This helped me to stop focusing on specific words and pick up more information in one glance.
My eye span I think is my biggest problem. I don't confidently pick up as much in my peripheral vision as I probably could. The solution to that? Exercise. Throughout the book, there are various eye exercises to help expand your eye span; helping you become better at picking up more information in one glance. One problem, however, was that the exercises weren't really adequate. They were often too short and once I memorized them, I wasn't really gaining much. However, this has not been a problem thanks to a great program, Ace Reader, which Marks-Beale suggests in one of the later chapters. The program is full of tests to help build speed and comprehension, but most helpful, I think, are the games to help expand your eye span. The program alone I think would be insufficient to dramatically increase reading speed. Ace Reader is available for 30 days free from their website; then $49.95 if you want to keep it.
As a whole, my reading clearly became faster in the ten day period. I definitely learned some great new techniques for reading faster, which will only open the roadway for me to continue to improve my speed and I became aware of some really bad habits that were blocking me from reading faster. I would say this book lives up to its title and anyone who will stick with this reading program will almost definitely experience an increase in speed and comprehension. You'll have to stick with it though!
Kudos Abby Marks-Beale; you've written an effective and useful book!
Ridiculous April 13, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
This book is just plain ridiculous. The main point is you can read faster if you try, and that's about it. The "valuable tools" you learn are just different positions to hold your hand or pencil while reading. Otherwise the books keeps repeating points over and over and giving you commonsensical advice like "it's easier to read without distractions" and "it's easier to read technical stuff if you get familiar with the jargon first". Wow, really?
The only value for me was realizing that it's ok to preview texts before reading (or even instead of reading). But that's a bit of a personal realization and any speed-reading guide probably would've given me that. Admittedly I've never read a speed-reading book (apart from a few articles) so this one might be better than the others, but there's nothing here for a college-educated regular reader. If you read every day, you've figured all of this stuff yourself.
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