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4 Steps to Read Difficult Texts Faster (Academic Speed Reading Comprehension) 

Justin Sung
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Sharing my strategies for reading with focus and efficiency.
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=== Notes ===
Many speed reading techniques are only suited for low to moderate-difficulty texts. Anyone who has used these techniques will know how difficult it is to sustain them persistently for study sessions that might be several hours long. It can be exhausting!
These are my tips (as someone who has read about 100+ pages of journal articles and textbooks every week for the last 10 years).
NOTE: This is not a FULL system. You still need to use other studying techniques for good encoding and retrieval, facilitated with a good note-taking system. Other techniques like scaffolding and smart skimming can also be useful.
These are NOT taught in this video.
=== About Dr Justin Sung ===
Dr. Justin Sung is a world-renowned expert in self-regulated learning, certified teacher, research author, and former medical doctor. He has guest lectured on learning skills at Monash University for Master’s and PhD students in Education and Medicine. Over the past decade, he has empowered tens of thousands of learners worldwide to dramatically improve their academic performance, learning efficiency, and motivation.
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7 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 673   
@JustinSung
@JustinSung 8 дней назад
Join my Learning Drops weekly newsletter here: bit.ly/3R3C5jF Every week, I distil what really works for improving results, memory, depth of understanding, and knowledge application from over a decade of coaching into bite-sized emails.
@spitalhelles3380
@spitalhelles3380 2 года назад
I don't read slowly, I just take my time to really appreciate how complicated the sentences are.
@kimseokjin6541
@kimseokjin6541 2 года назад
I laughed too hard at this🤣
@basicblue7124
@basicblue7124 2 года назад
agree
@nicolasitl6861
@nicolasitl6861 2 года назад
For Instagram photos hahahah
@arjamandchoudhary8581
@arjamandchoudhary8581 2 года назад
😭🤣
@jacelynacopido8306
@jacelynacopido8306 2 года назад
Exactly!
@anthropyguo9997
@anthropyguo9997 2 года назад
Techniques: 1. Sub-vocalisation 2: Grouping words Strategy - When to use techniques 1. Change of reading speed - burst + slows 2. Take pauses - mental logging + prediction 3. Epub format - narrow columns - fewer eye positions - grey background with Flux turned on
@Jaszleemin
@Jaszleemin 2 года назад
thanks alot!
@RoshanSharma-mo6vy
@RoshanSharma-mo6vy 2 года назад
Its a waste to comment this crap , a 20 minute video will teach you much more than what you wrote . You have just written the points and not informed us how to apply them or what they are. Dont make a fool out of yourself by looking a way for getting more likes.
@antonkazda
@antonkazda 2 года назад
@@RoshanSharma-mo6vy Nobody thinks that... You're just toxic
@normy2070
@normy2070 2 года назад
​@@RoshanSharma-mo6vy I appreciate all point of views. what's yours?
@eugeneylliez829
@eugeneylliez829 2 года назад
Anthropy Guo Thank you for your useful summary.
@chessymaye
@chessymaye 2 года назад
I appreciate the disclaimer that you can read fiction slowly so you can immerse yourself in the story. Once speed reading has become a habit of mine, I speed read every piece of text I come across, which later on diminished the joy I feel in reading non-academic texts, especially literature. Speed reading is a good habit, but when done incorrectly, can diminish the quality of overall reading experience, methinks.
@darshnikdeep4650
@darshnikdeep4650 2 года назад
true Cruz
@BeanSprouts02
@BeanSprouts02 Год назад
For those who are able to read fast though AND can understand the text properly, think twice before slowing down. I remember deliberately slowing my reading speed back then because I heard that will make me enjoy or absorb what I'm reading better. But when I slowed my reading speed down, I felt no improvement at all and actually felt myself regress. So remember, some of the advices here in the internet shouldn't be followed blindly. Try them out and see if it makes you improve, but don't take them all as dogma that have to be followed right to the T all the time.
@NonJohns
@NonJohns Год назад
i just blitz through in chunks, then sit back and process what i just read
@Itsmemavie
@Itsmemavie Год назад
True that's what I noticed with myself too TT
@earlpipe9713
@earlpipe9713 Год назад
Oh yeah. Even beyond the enjoyment factor, fiction/narrative writing can often have, in it's more complex forms and stories, just as much, or more, to say in it's subtextual content than is there in it's upfront exoteric text. This is not a feature (or shouldn't be anyway) in academic non fiction writing, even if it's otherwise unnecessarily complex with technical jargon and such
@oichiana2002
@oichiana2002 2 года назад
11:11 the strategy 13:35 summery on screen 17:50 mini extra tip Great video
@cse3_01_abhijeet5
@cse3_01_abhijeet5 2 года назад
Thankyou
@kulturalkontrariankomedy
@kulturalkontrariankomedy 2 года назад
Thank you 😊💖 this is very useful
@SilencedButNotForgotten
@SilencedButNotForgotten 2 года назад
Thanks!
@handldyDandidlyD.ezzzzz
@handldyDandidlyD.ezzzzz 2 года назад
great comment
@CorsairCrazy
@CorsairCrazy 2 года назад
thank you
@guilhermeteixeira7095
@guilhermeteixeira7095 2 года назад
When it comes to these hard and long texts one method I rely on to maintain focus and be more productive is to listen to an audio version of the text (usually in a higher speed) and read it along (silently, only with my eyes).
@georgejetson9801
@georgejetson9801 2 года назад
I like this too.
@fatimakhan4671
@fatimakhan4671 2 года назад
Do you know how to do that on pc?
@jinamatcharia8027
@jinamatcharia8027 2 года назад
@@fatimakhan4671 Microsoft Edge browser does read aloud pdf files
@issy0613
@issy0613 2 года назад
@@fatimakhan4671 Speechify PDF
@markanthonyfuerte9369
@markanthonyfuerte9369 2 года назад
@@fatimakhan4671 xodo pdf / microsoft edge
@Taratreehugger
@Taratreehugger Год назад
I’ve read so many articles on speed reading and this is the first one in several years that has offered new and useful advice! It’s very practical and realistic and so much of it matches my actual experience with academic texts. Thank you!
@glxxmy
@glxxmy 2 года назад
Finally, someone who doesn't throw sub vocals out completely.
@EsKaioS
@EsKaioS Год назад
Really appreciate breaking down the different ways our eyes read novels vs academic papers! I've never realised the difference until now and would always have those papers where I could never understand/retain what the authors were trying to present.
@mikeoneill81
@mikeoneill81 2 года назад
I’m not sure how RU-vid knew I needed this, but thank you. I’m a returning college student with poor reading skills. I hope to use these techniques you mentioned. Thank you
@doseelistenrepeat
@doseelistenrepeat Год назад
This really guided me to actively reading better. I am grateful for your information being free, here on RU-vid. Thank you for your service!
@maikbode9791
@maikbode9791 2 года назад
This text seems to be the epitomy of lazy writing (especially the sentence "Similarly, it is..."). Which is why we need such informative videos about speed reading. Next mission: Teach academics to write concisive texts.
@killaname6368
@killaname6368 2 года назад
Why is it lazy writing?
@TheGrmany69
@TheGrmany69 2 года назад
That's difficult, depending on the subject, programming books are kinda nefarious in that aspect.
@thewatermelon3831
@thewatermelon3831 2 года назад
@@killaname6368 i think it's more like fluff writing. some words just don't add meaning to the content. and with time pressure and higher pace of life in general, we need/want something that is straight to the point. but in the long term, everything will be in bullet points, thus losing the literature or artistic aspect of writing
@bingbong2257
@bingbong2257 2 года назад
idk if lazy is the right word. It's actually like they're making a legitimate effort to make basic ideas sound as complex as possible, so they sound extra smart. It's like an intellectual dick measuring contest. It's just a pretentious academic circle jerk. There's nothing intelligent about using flowery words that have low frequency. There's no chance whatsoever that these people talk like this in normal conversation. They probably had a thesaurus sitting next to them so they could look up the most flowery combination of words to describe what could have been easily described by just talking like a normal person. "oh let's not use 'internal', let's use intrinsic" "let's not use 'normal', let's say normative" "let's not say 'object', let's say 'physical artifacts'". "physical artifacts".... lmfao... just say "thing" or "stuff". Jesus fucking christ, these people...
@EragonShadeslayer
@EragonShadeslayer 2 года назад
@@bingbong2257 I don’t know man I type naturally like this whenever I’m typing anything serious. I have always read loads of books so I have a high vocabulary and I use whatever comes to mind first that fits into the sentence I’m writing as well as possible. These sentences aren’t very flowery at all, they look just like something I’d write naturally for school. Often when they use unnecessary words such as “similarly,” they do this because this is how their brains have made connections between the subjects in question. For me it would be more difficult to be minimalistic than to be what you call “flowery,” and I assume that it is the same for them. Sure, I could be minimalistic if I tried, but that takes effort and being “flowery” doesn’t. They aren’t even really being that flowery anyway.
@LynneC44
@LynneC44 Год назад
I’m 63-I always sub-vocalize text. I just can’t process the information without doing so. I also read with pencil in hand to circle, draw boxes, underline. Will try the grouping words together tomorrow…Thank you so much for this great video.
@Made-in-mind
@Made-in-mind Год назад
After listening the whole video, my mind be : this should have been a part of school education. Reading and writing are basically taught in schools only to tackle laterwards in adulthood. But no, they miss out the most important part of Reading techniques & Strategies. My prior life be like ...waste of my existence till I got to watch this life improving session. I am very thankful to you 🙏 for saving the rest of my life. I wish people would be like you, to help people in early stages of life.
@camilonunez3919
@camilonunez3919 2 года назад
Good video. I've been into speed reading for about a year and these tips really come in handy. However, it'd had been nice if you gave us tips to read when the text column is too stretched out, like in a book, where you have no control over it.
@gracecar5820
@gracecar5820 2 года назад
Your channel is woefully underrated. This is the most useful and nuanced information I’ve been able to find on this platform.
@poddopetals
@poddopetals 6 месяцев назад
This helped me finish each of the SAT reading sections with 10 minutes (so total 20 minutes) remaining! Thanks Justin!
@claireding3163
@claireding3163 2 года назад
Just realized that I have basically been doing all the things mentioned in this video unconsciously… including finding reading full screen on a lap top such a pain that I ended up getting an iPad for reading papers. Awesome tips will watch all your other videos next.
@theblindedboy8746
@theblindedboy8746 2 года назад
Summary of 4 Steps to Read Difficult Texts Faster: Techinque - Importantce of techinque drops a lot in hard text 1. Sub-vocalizing reduces speed but also reduces cognitive load (Bad & Good) 2. Relax our eyes so we can proccess more information 3. Grouping words is more energy inefficent and increases speed Strategy - When we use the techinque (Skip not useful info and focus on more useful info) 1. Group easy words and sprint hard parts 2. Sub-vocalize hard parts and slow down 3. Pause to proccess what you've just learned 4. Think about what the text is about
@majackson7093
@majackson7093 Год назад
Thanks, but wouldn't it be "Group easy words and sprint easy parts"?
@rebbouhhind2580
@rebbouhhind2580 Год назад
@@majackson7093 exactly! It makes sense that you sprint the easiest part since you sub vocalise hard parts therefore you can not read fast when you sub vocalise.
@gustavoteles5994
@gustavoteles5994 9 месяцев назад
thanks
@lucasp1185
@lucasp1185 7 месяцев назад
Key Points: Reading Technique vs. Reading Strategy: While reading techniques are important, reading strategies become more crucial when dealing with complex texts. Techniques might be more beneficial for simpler texts, but strategies are essential for understanding dense academic material. Sub-vocalization: This is the act of silently pronouncing words in your mind as you read. While it can slow down reading speed, it also aids in comprehension. Dr. Justin suggests that learners should know when to use sub-vocalization strategically. Grouping Words Together: One of the most effective techniques for speed reading is to group words and read them in chunks rather than individually. This technique automatically reduces sub-vocalization and increases reading speed. Strategic Pauses: Taking breaks to process information is crucial. During these breaks, readers should reflect on what they've read and predict what might come next. This helps in better comprehension and retention of information. Technical Tips: Narrow Field: Using a narrow field (like a column) for reading reduces the need for the eyes to move from left to right extensively. This can help in reading faster and reduces eye strain. Background Color: Dr. Justin suggests using a gray background and tools like Flux to reduce eye strain.
@ayase.4487
@ayase.4487 2 года назад
Best channel for students. Need more recognition!!
@caizza3
@caizza3 Год назад
So much more useful than the stock standard advice I’ve seen about reading novels. Thank you!
@shary789
@shary789 2 года назад
Dude, thanks so much for the videos! I'm a radiology resident in desperate need for more effective and efficient studying techniques. Stumbled upon your videos by chance and they're giving so much insight.
@gracecar5820
@gracecar5820 2 года назад
I am also a radiology registrar drowning in information.
@mohamedgamal-bv7hn
@mohamedgamal-bv7hn 2 года назад
@@gracecar5820 How's radiology btw I'm a medical student
@_ashutosh_singh_rathore
@_ashutosh_singh_rathore Год назад
This video is certainly the information I was in dire need of but couldn't actually point towards of what do I need to know or how can I do things better. I didn't even had realized what problems I am facing that are making me unproductive and why I couldn't study efficiently. Thanks for this video I'm so glad I stumbled on it. Subscribed. Thanks RU-vid algorithm.
@Taratreehugger
@Taratreehugger Год назад
This is the missing piece I’ve been looking for! The difference between technique and strategy. Thanks!
@ryanf6671
@ryanf6671 9 месяцев назад
Thank you much I just started my first year of college and hope what you have shared continues to help me in my journey.
@angelusvastator1297
@angelusvastator1297 2 года назад
Group easy words and sprint to the hard parts is definitely the strategy that works for me the most. Thanks!
@nevaehjol9319
@nevaehjol9319 Год назад
This thing helped me, I am starting my gr 10, and I find myself reading faster than gr 9, just by practice using these techniques with a few texts during the holiday. Thank you!
@beakless_duck
@beakless_duck 2 года назад
Coming in clutch, I'm going to have workshops tomorrow where I'll need to parse thru research papers very quickly Thanks Justin!
@kurtcobain3346
@kurtcobain3346 Год назад
This is quite useful. For all my reading of academic texts I only recently was beginning to at the end of paragraphs think about what I just read. However, I would only be looking backwards instead of forwards/both.
@TheFallOfNumenor14
@TheFallOfNumenor14 2 года назад
Thank you so much for uploading this, it was so well explained. I’ll try this out for my masters degree studying as well as reading some fiction just out of curiosity.
@Romo2055
@Romo2055 2 года назад
this text could be so much more concise and still get the point across, so many academic texts are just waffles at best with such inefficient writing, but videos like these help in saving time and energy so much, Thanks Justin!
@HereTakeAFlower
@HereTakeAFlower Год назад
I'm writing my thesis and you bet I'm gonna make soup if I have a 30 pages minimum, which by the way I know no man on Earth is gonna read anyways.
@earlpipe9713
@earlpipe9713 Год назад
🤔Has word salad been replaced by alphabet soup?
@sengju4468
@sengju4468 Год назад
@@HereTakeAFlower Ehy would anyone make you write that much. Are you writing your own book?
@HereTakeAFlower
@HereTakeAFlower Год назад
@@sengju4468 In Italy we have a delightful mindset where bureaucrats in their ivory towers decide shit and we just do it because there's no way to object.
@larrybrowser8286
@larrybrowser8286 Год назад
Best video on reading among the videos I have watched so far. Thank you.
@maryzakiandourrugrats4671
@maryzakiandourrugrats4671 Год назад
This is the most practical advice on this matter. Thank you
@saiforos7928
@saiforos7928 Год назад
I'm really interested in trying to apply this in math. In a paper or graduate/reference book, you frequently spend a day on a single page or less. But the essence of your technique, namely pausing to anticipate might actually be really hopeful. I hope to remember and try this tomorrow.
@IKcodeIgorWnek
@IKcodeIgorWnek 22 дня назад
Great vid Justin, thank you. At the moment I have a lot of books on my way and need to improve my reading speed. Great advices.
@robertcook7353
@robertcook7353 2 года назад
I love this article ! It’s going to change my life. Thank you.
@siegefor7
@siegefor7 4 месяца назад
its my first time to research about reading techniques as I'm loaded with a lot of reading materials in Law school and need to manage my energy according to what is realistic. I'm glad i stumbled upon your video first before anything else here.
@SantoshKumar-ju4rn
@SantoshKumar-ju4rn 2 года назад
Yes, I have always maintained that sub-vocalisation increses comprehension.
@pranjaldas7803
@pranjaldas7803 2 года назад
Very few channel discuss and teach you how to study... Thanks s ton for making video on the topic.
@orinaemiidoniboye3086
@orinaemiidoniboye3086 Год назад
Thank you🙏 For this life saving video, this is exactly what i have been looking For.
@user-dg5wy7zh9f
@user-dg5wy7zh9f Год назад
I really need it. Thank you so much for this sharing.
@MrHandsomeferny
@MrHandsomeferny 7 месяцев назад
Thank you! I really appreciate you sharing your strategies!
@e00d20
@e00d20 2 года назад
This channel is gold
@ReigenArataki
@ReigenArataki 2 года назад
This is definitely gonna help me with Philosophy. Thanks Doc!
@Acez-lf4qk
@Acez-lf4qk Год назад
I also study Philosophy, how did this affect your study?
@ankitnath7068
@ankitnath7068 Год назад
This is the best video on speed reading i came across.
@veyiun
@veyiun Месяц назад
Wow. This one video literally improved the way I read so much, and I can comprehend the text in my AP Lang class and SAT so much more easier. I thought it was a skill issue but it was just that the way I approached the text was wrong 😭Huge thank you🙏🙏
@joeg3117
@joeg3117 11 месяцев назад
wow can't wait to apply these techniques to my books. thank you !
@captainobvious9188
@captainobvious9188 2 года назад
Complicated textbooks aren’t about following a narrative, but playing the memorization game. I’m commenting while I watch: Wow, I found the same thing about subvocalization in terms of my focus. Doing the subvocalization in my head is the tightrope that I concentrate on that keeps my attention.
@RexZ412
@RexZ412 2 года назад
Dayummmm Justin’s uploading
@kulturalkontrariankomedy
@kulturalkontrariankomedy 2 года назад
I love all of your points and I was listening to this before studying. I decided to use all these tips and it's hard at first but it helped me. Thank you so much for sharing!
@gowtham884
@gowtham884 2 года назад
The ultimate goal is to save time. Pls keep your videos to the point and crisp.
@Shinchan-ft2ju
@Shinchan-ft2ju Месяц назад
Best Video i have watched so far 💯💯
@alecbernardo149
@alecbernardo149 Год назад
Thanks for the great video! I also agree with how convinient the epub is. I personally recommend putting the font size bigger as it doesn't strain the eye more. I personally get dizzy if I read in normal font size for just an hour and need some break for my eyes to hurt. Ive been reading for years and my sight is still better than most people out there. P.s. this is just my opinion and will put disclaimer here and there
@Lovekeeper257
@Lovekeeper257 8 месяцев назад
That was brilliant! Thank you so much!
@rolodex3452
@rolodex3452 11 месяцев назад
ive never thought of grouping words together like that very cool thabks man
@FabiolaDetariFabs
@FabiolaDetariFabs Год назад
Great practical video that I have been looking for!
@azizbek_jastlekov
@azizbek_jastlekov 3 месяца назад
That's a great guide video, i love it. I subscribed for this channel
@user-hi4uy2pv9k
@user-hi4uy2pv9k 3 месяца назад
Thank you so much!
@tamasg79
@tamasg79 3 месяца назад
Thank you for making this video, very helpful!
@mohammada.settar4441
@mohammada.settar4441 Год назад
Thanks for your efforts in making such a video..for your informations..what you mentioned in all these steps,our brain do it automatically and becomes more clear by experience..the secrets to all these videos about techniques and strategies is to know how our brain work and specifically how our memory work..repeat recoil condense analyse digest and conclude a whole chapters by few words.make roads or”maps of mind” is also a natural way of what our brains do by making new connections and roads between the memory and different senses what is called synapses..so if anyone want to develop his brain function he must ask his brain ,observe it and you will get unlimited ways of learnings and knowledge gaining..as people different ,their brains too.and don’t forget that the brain has a an exterior connection with his body ,so things like mood, rest, anger,disease, the surroundings even the lights and sounds surrounding us affect our brains..I hope this would be helpful for anyone wants to make a strong bases of learning the answer was always inside you!
@jaswanthtalada.
@jaswanthtalada. Год назад
Within Justin sung now a part of me feels great thanks 👍
@samidelcueva
@samidelcueva 2 года назад
This makes a lot of sense. Thanks for sharing.
@NazerkeSafina
@NazerkeSafina 3 месяца назад
this is brilliant, thank you
@AVSeS_2100
@AVSeS_2100 2 года назад
For the first time I got a very natural humanly piece of advice . Thankyou Doctor, for your time and effort to condense your insights of reading Effectively with Smooth Transition and Sustained Focus (esp while dealing with difficult academic chapters) into a 19 min crisp and concise video . Moving eyes left to right is tiring if done for longer time and having a EPUB tip comes in handy . Although I prefer left to right motion as it exercises your eye muscles and the more you practice the more eye muscles adapt to it and hence faster movement with time . EPUB is a good tip but I don't see it as a good habit to carry on . Makes your eyes dull and weak . As Being a Doctor ,you know This Human Body is meant for Motion .A Good Exercise can never be bad only tiring one and so take rest and Start again.
@abeer6383
@abeer6383 Год назад
Do eye exercises later
@AVSeS_2100
@AVSeS_2100 Год назад
@@abeer6383 Then I'm sure you are someone with glasses 👓.
@thoaianhquach8155
@thoaianhquach8155 Год назад
Thank you for your helpful video. The explanations are very lucid.
@PreetiSharma-py7yo
@PreetiSharma-py7yo Год назад
Thanks Justin. I'm an English teacher and I found your tips very useful. It's a shame I've been telling my students to "read in your mind." I was under the wrong impression, that when kids read out loud, they process information slower. Why don't they teach these strategies to teachers, so we can pass it on to students? Have subscribed to your channel. Where can I find your videos on mind maps?
@marumaranatha
@marumaranatha 9 месяцев назад
I agree with you our teachers always tell us to ready quietly but it’s does help you at all with vocabulary words or to keep reading habits efficiently
@appleitree
@appleitree 7 месяцев назад
How did i find such an amazing teacher with such an intense care for students? 1 in a million
@leeladurietz6209
@leeladurietz6209 11 месяцев назад
This is great, thanks Justin!!😍
@QuantumForger
@QuantumForger 3 месяца назад
Thanks for the tips
@parkyounghee4516
@parkyounghee4516 11 месяцев назад
Super useful tips! Thanks for sharing. 😊
@fire9169
@fire9169 2 года назад
Thank you a lot for this! Helped a lot
@mafediaz9941
@mafediaz9941 Год назад
thank you! This is totally what I needed :)
@vanessalanier1306
@vanessalanier1306 2 года назад
Thank you Justin!!✨
@ajmalomeri2763
@ajmalomeri2763 2 года назад
thank you very much. really appreciated
@anyasea10739
@anyasea10739 3 месяца назад
I know I'm a couple of years late but thank you soooo much for this, I really struggle with academic reading and a lecturer put up 11 readings(including multiple books, one of which is 800 pages) for an essay I have to write - I'll definitely try this!
@gheabadilles1446
@gheabadilles1446 2 года назад
Very informative. Thank you so much!
@sashakirilova4187
@sashakirilova4187 2 года назад
This techniques seems to be quite helpful. Thank you.
@fy0013
@fy0013 2 года назад
best video I’ve watched in a while, thank you and keep up the good work!
@dqwira
@dqwira 3 месяца назад
thank you for sharing this
@zerosub8572
@zerosub8572 2 года назад
How long did it take you to become proficient in speed reading? Great video btw, I’ll definitely be trying this out
@ishrakmujibift4269
@ishrakmujibift4269 4 месяца назад
Thank you! This was quite helpful
@shaypierre83
@shaypierre83 Год назад
I really enjoyed this video and glad I watched it completely
@trishala2312
@trishala2312 Год назад
This is very helpful! Thank you!
@richardho8283
@richardho8283 Год назад
Thank you Doc for your generous sharing of skills. 👍👍👏👏💪💪🙏🙏
@esther_lolll
@esther_lolll 27 дней назад
Thank you
@isabella-1796
@isabella-1796 2 года назад
Thank you for this video~ I honestly thought something was wrong with me for not being able to concentrate properly while reading and having to read a portion over and over again.
@TheAnarchist99
@TheAnarchist99 2 года назад
Same. One of my biggest yet so obvious mistakes is reading books on PDF format rather than epub format until very recently. You can imagine how messy and packed each page is ☠️.
@bannnnny
@bannnnny 2 года назад
sounds like you’re kiwi?! good to hear someone local producing quality vids around this domain. cheers for the advice :)
@lunarl1ly
@lunarl1ly Год назад
ive always been able to read without sub vocalising. i think i got it from seeing some cool optical illusions where someone would scramble the letters in the words of a sentence so that you couldn’t find it from sub vocalising but from recognising shape. this lead to just scrolling through texts in primary school to find the key words and has helped a lot in studying
@janechapman7801
@janechapman7801 2 года назад
I am dyslexic so this might not be very generisable but usually lots of small words cause me more processing issues when reading large words are usually easier to read. Simplification usin more small words often causes things to become difficult to follow once you have learnt word stem eg heam ( San e other way round in British English ) you don't have to focus on each letter generally I'm thinking about the images generated by what I read unless I'm reading something very abstract. Reading several words at once and reading in thinner Collins really helps the flow I find.
@JustinSung
@JustinSung 2 года назад
I've found over the years (and this is just anecdotally my experience, not based on research as far as I know), but many of the strategies suitable for students with dyslexia are actually suitable for students without dyslexia as well. Dyslexic techniques to compensate for weaker verbal processing results in higher processing from other parts of the brain, which I find benefits all students. Thanks for sharing your insights!
@bobbobson4030
@bobbobson4030 2 года назад
@@JustinSung What sorts of dyslexic techniques in particular?
@rianakumari4073
@rianakumari4073 11 месяцев назад
And when I write any words very mistakes it spell
@Redranddd
@Redranddd Год назад
I do the pauses not only reading but also with videos, is a very natural thing
@ogundiranmartha4405
@ogundiranmartha4405 4 месяца назад
19:58 Truthfully this sounds so practical .I am going to try this, i sure hope this helps me to read more efficiently and also rememeber what I read.thank you would try this.
@danielnbompa-turay9690
@danielnbompa-turay9690 Год назад
Thanks Justin!
@senorrex4366
@senorrex4366 Год назад
Thanks for the great video, it was awesome!!!
@AHDSKabul
@AHDSKabul 9 месяцев назад
Hi, Thanks for the very good instruction, all is outstanding
@jackjhmc820
@jackjhmc820 2 года назад
Finally a real demonstration of what sub vocalisations are supposed to be. But most of the time, I wont be able to process the meaning of sentences in English without sub vocalisations. But I can do the sub vocalisations in Chinese much better and only focus on key grammars words.
@dr.bishop1126
@dr.bishop1126 3 месяца назад
You've helped me so much. Thank you Justin. I'll sub :))
@adityaputu2107
@adityaputu2107 9 месяцев назад
thank you Justin!
@ArchNemeziz8
@ArchNemeziz8 2 года назад
I subvocalize and mostly visualize what I read. With easy text, this goes really fast, but with difficult (academic) text I tend to just subvocalize and understand/analyze what it means
@essennagerry
@essennagerry 2 года назад
Oh wow, this is so exciting! I heard, I think from Andrew Huberman, that 10 second breaks just doing nothing are very benefitial to learning and our brains repeat what we were learning at high speeds very similar to how that happens during sleep. You seem to be taking that to the next level! If I didn't know that I would wonder why should I put in the effort to read fast if the breaks to process it basically even it out, then why not read slowly and process as I go... but you're really utilizing neuroscience here! I have a book to read and I read about less than a third from it, I'm excited to try this technique on the book.
@essennagerry
@essennagerry 2 года назад
@@GabrielCazorlaPersson1 I totally understand what you mean, thank you for your reply! I do already kinda follow my feel for think, trying to keep in mind there may be some factors making things a bit different for different individuals. But this is a new perspective. Also, I want to practice this type of reading but if I feel it doesn't work I'll just revert back to reading like I always do - subvocalizing everything lol.
@Drfiza
@Drfiza 2 года назад
im so glad i came across your channel .
@niharikasaxena6926
@niharikasaxena6926 4 месяца назад
Thank you!
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