Speed-reading

2008-07-25 08:50:27

Speed-reading is the purported ability to read as many as 10,000 to 25,000

words a minute. For example, Howard Berg claims to be able to read 25,000 words

a minute by reading "15 lines at a time backwards and forwards." That's about

80-90 pages a minute. Tolstoy's War and Peace should take Berg about 15 minutes

to read.

George Stancliffe claims he has taught a woman with a reading disability to

read 18,000 words a minute. Such a feat, he says, is common in children, but

rare in adults.*

Anne Cunningham, a University of California at Berkeley education professor and

an expert on reading, reports that tests measuring saccades (small rapid jerky

movement of the eye as it jumps from fixation on one point to another) while

reading have determined that the maximum number of words a person can

accurately read is about 300 a minute. "People who purport to read 10,000 words

a minute are doing what we call skimming," she said. Speed in reading is mainly

determined by how fast a reader can understand the words and expressions one is

reading. The fastest readers are those with excellent "recognition

vocabularies." Faster readers can see words and understand them faster than

slower readers. To improve one's speed at reading, she says, one should work on

comprehension and study strategies (Robertson).

Others claim that "the average college student reads between 250 and 350 words

per minute on fiction and non-technical materials" and that a "good" reading

speed is 500-700 words per minute.* It does seem intuitively true that one

could speed up one's reading by (a) spending less time between eye movements;

(b) taking in more words with each fixation; and (c) always moving forward,

rather than skipping back to re-read something. Having a good recognition

vocabulary would certainly speed these processes up. Conscious practice at

improving one's speed should also help.

Berg has repackaged the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course, one popular

several decades ago with people like John F. Kennedy. A reporter who attended

one of Berg's classes noted that in his five-hour course, Berg hadn't said much

about comprehension, except to suggest that it would come with practice. This

did not deter several of the 35 students, who had paid $51 each for the class

from the Learning Exchange in Sacramento, from purchasing audio tapes for $65

(Robertson).

Those desiring to increase the speed of their reading would do better to enroll

in a community college course devoted to building study skills, vocabulary, and

reading comprehension. It would cost them less, and they would not end up

wasting their time trying to read 10 lines at a time, backward and forward.

They would also avoid the frustration that will be inevitable when they find

that while they can skim through material at a greater rate than they can read

it, the utility of such a skill is limited (good for most of what's likely to

be in the daily newspaper, for example, but not for studying physics or reading

a good novel). Skimming makes both comprehension and taking pleasure in words

or ideas next to impossible. Why read fiction at all if you don't want to enjoy

the language and the ideas? Who would want to hire a physician or lawyer who

skimmed rather than read his or her texts?

near-perfect comprehension. His name is Kim Peek and he has the ability to read

two pages simultaneously, one with each eye, with 98% retention. Nobody knows

how he does it but he was born without a corpus callosum, that bundle of nerves

that connects the right and left hemispheres of the brain. However, others have

also been born with no corpus callosum, or have had it surgically disconnected,

without resulting in an increase in reading or retention abilities. Kim can

recall most of the contents of some 7,600 books. But, since nobody knows how

Kim Peek does it, nobody can teach this skill to others.

Kim Peek was partly the model for Raymond, the idiot savant in the movie Rain

Man.

July 13, 2006

After reading the article I do not believe that you have done the proper

research about speed reading. Have you questioned an authority about speed

reading before you wrote your article? More importantly have you yourself taken

a course on speed reading or are you basing your opinion on word of mouth? I

ask that, realizing that you quoted someone named Anne Cunningham, an expert on

reading who seems to have no idea how actual speed reading works or how

effective it is.

---- reply: In the early 1960s I became interested in speed reading after

reading about John F. Kennedy's support for the Evelyn Wood method. I studied

speed reading and found that I could read significantly faster if I spent less

time between eye movements by taking in several words rather than one word at a

time and if I didn't have to re-read things or stop to look up words. Having a

large recognition vocabulary did more to speed up my reading than anything

else. I was fortunate to have had a high-school English teacher who required

his students to learn 20 new words a week. For many years, I studied the

dictionary to expand my vocabulary as much as I could.

I took two courses on speed reading in college to help me with my courses and

can tell you from personal experience that my increased speed in reading (from

about 350 wpm to about 1,900 wpm ) and comprehension (from about 52% to over 75

%) had little to do with saccades and increased word recognition. My over-all

study-time dropped dramatically and my grades all came up as well.

---- reply: Obviously, you were highly motivated to succeed. I don't doubt that

you can skim 1,900 wpm with 75% comprehension and that for many college courses

that would be sufficient to get an A.

In essence, speed reading involves a few disciplines and understandings. First

of all, that the human mind can process information faster that the human eye

can read. Try reading exceptionally slow (1 word per minute for instance) and

see how far your comprehension drops as your mind wanders and forgets what it

had previously read. Your mind is much more focused on the subject at hand when

you are reading more words per minute, which is one of the reasons

comprehension goes up so dramatically in speed readers.

---- reply: You are right that a focused, attentive reader will read faster

than an unfocused, inattentive reader. But I don't think that this has anything

to do with the speed of processing information by the "human mind" versus the

speed of processing information by the human eye. It has to do with processing

information when focused and attentive versus processing information when there

are distractions.

Speed reading also involves opening up your peripheral vision to take-in

multiple words at once rather than reading just one word at a time. We were

taught to take-in two words at once, then advanced to an entire line of text at

one time. (I was only proficient at taking in about 5 7 words at a time but

others were much better than I.) Still, you can see how this would diminish any

talk of the speed at which ones eyes would have to jump around a page

(saccade.) Our instructor was able to take in two lines at once. By keeping the

center of our vision in the middle of the page, we were taught to read down the

page and take-in the full width of the page at one time.

Back in grade school we all learned to read a word one letter at a time,

sounding out the words in our heads or out loud. As we all developed we learned

to read one entire word at a time. Speed reading involves reading BLOCKS of

words at one time and absorbing the overall meaning of the words, much like

viewing an image understanding its meaning. In short, you can better discern

the meaning from a group of words than you can by adding a single word at a

time. If you can read as fast as your mind can comprehend you are much less

likely to forget key points.

Another thing we learned to do (with difficulty in my case) was to shut off the

little voice in your head that sounded out each word. This is known as

sub-vocalization and most people do it. If a person does this, their maximum

reading speed is held in check by the maximum speed at which they can sound-out

the words, which is approximately their talking speed ( Which, coincidentally

is 250 350 wpm.) Getting rid of that habit alone almost doubled my reading

speed. Speed reading is definitely a skill that needs to be practiced or you

lose some of your ability.

---- reply: Perhaps in skimming my article you missed my mention of the

importance of taking in more words with each fixation. Subvocalization is a

problem that is resolved by taking in blocks of words instead of single words.

You cannot sound out blocks of words. I don't specifically mention this problem

in my article but perhaps I should have.

I will say that I enjoy reading science fiction work and other items at my

normal speed, but when I have to its nice to know that I can read much faster,

comprehend and remember much more than normal if I have to. If you have done so

already I ask that you take a class for yourself and see just how incorrect

your article was.

Jason Hatch

---- reply: Thanks, but I think you missed some key points in my article.

07 Nov 2003

I am an educational consultant and have expertise in the area of "speed

reading", and was a partner with Evelyn Wood (1909-1995).

1. It is time to update your article based on the latest 'unbiased' research.

In the industry we respect Howard Berg and George Stancliffe, but they are the

exception, not the rule, in terms of throwing-around-numbers. The rest of us

would never dream of talking about 25,000 words per minute, even as publicity

hyperbole. It's a joke. In the past we have tracked thousands,

tens-of-thousands of graduates, and not had 'one' in two-million

(real-number!), read at that illusionary 25K words per minute. There are freaks

in all fields, but we have not run-across them - yet even in 'Basic' - which is

a simple novel. Forget about 'Semi' or 'Tuff' material, which includes

textbooks or Scientific American.

2. The typical graduate can expect to read 'triple' their beginning reading

speed - (300%), in Basic, Semi-Tuff and Tuff-Stuff level of difficulty

material, with equal or better (about 10%), improvement in comprehension. Most

start at 250wpm on Basic, and drop to 150wpm when confronted with dense text in

Semi and Tuff material; so does their comprehension drop like a rock.

3. Please see: www.uwgb.edu/esms/sss/read.htm This is used by the University of

Wisconsin, at Green Bay, and taken from the leading collegiate textbook on

"accelerated" reading.

4. One of my clients - www.speedlearning.org is affiliated with a major

university, and does pre-testing, mid-term- and post-testing, and does not

depend on subjective feedback. They produce graduates from 5th grade (Public

School 59) in NYC, and executives and professionals who maintain their "triple"

reading speed and comprehension - ad infinitum. They do not engage in the use

of the Power of Suggestion, Cold Readings, Push or other nonsense to inflate a

student's success.

5. If you are interested in today's speed reading strategies and training-tools

- (SpeedLearning uses a handheld laser-pace called a RasterMaster), you might

want to take the course in NYC without tuition or the need to offer a

complimentary 'testimonial' at its conclusion.

6. Graduates can read "three" books, articles or reports with improved

comprehension, compared to their original skills of reading perhaps one book,

but with lousy recall.

Hal