Title


Mind Tools Newsletter 179: Read Smarter!

To view this newsletter online, please click here.
Mind Tools Newsletter 179: Read Smarter!
You've received this newsletter because you subscribed to it using our double opt-in sign-up process. To unsubscribe, just click the link at the bottom of this email. Alternatively, if you're not already a subscriber, you can sign up here.
Contents
Reading Strategies
Learning Styles
Mind Maps
Achieving Quick Wins
How To Prioritize
Empowered
A Final Note
At Mind Tools...
About Mind Tools
Membership
Corporate Services
Tool Explorer
Contact Us

Facebook

Twitter logo
Mind Tools Newsletter 179 - February 22, 2011
Read Smarter!


From project proposals and emails, to blog posts and newspaper articles, you probably read a lot every day. But have you ever thought about how you can get MORE from what you read?

This week's newsletter article, on Reading Strategies, helps you to do just that. In it, we show you how to read intelligently to get the greatest benefit from your reading.

Our other all-readers' articles this week follow a similar theme, focusing on Learning Styles, and on using Mind Maps - a powerful approach to note-taking.

We also have some great new resources from the Mind Tools community, the Career Excellence Club, including a useful guide to Achieving Quick Wins in a new role or project. This is key to making a great early impression!

Enjoy the newsletter!


James Rachel

James Manktelow and Rachel Thompson
MindTools.com - Essential skills for an excellent career!

Featured Resources at Mind Tools
Reading Strategies
Reading Strategies
Reading Efficiently by Reading Intelligently
All Readers
How effectively do you read? Use these strategies to get the most from your reading. All Readers' Skill-Builder
Learning Styles
Learning Styles
Understanding Your Learning Preference
All Readers
Not everyone learns in the same way. Find out how you prefer to learn, and discover what you can do to maximize your own - and others' - learning. All Readers' Skill-Builder
Mind Maps
Mind Maps
A Powerful Approach to Note-Taking
All Readers
This article shows you how to draw Mind Maps. These help you improve your note taking skills, remember things easily, and review information quickly. All Readers' Skill-Builder
  ... And from the Career Excellence Club
Achieving Quick Wins
Achieving Quick Wins
Building Confidence with Quick Results
Club Members
Find out what "quick wins" are, and learn how you can use them to achieve early success in a new role or new project. All Members' New Tool
How To Prioritize
How To Prioritize Club Members
This short training session focuses on the essential skills and techniques you need to prioritize effectively. All Members' Bite-Sized Training™
Empowered
Empowered, with Josh Bernoff Club Members
In this interview, Josh Bernoff explains how organizations can use low-cost technologies to inspire innovation, and solve problems creatively.
Premium Members' Expert Interview
Editors' Choice Article
Reading Strategies
Reading Efficiently by Reading Intelligently

Whether they're project documents, trade journals, blogs, business books or ebooks, most of us read regularly as part of our jobs, and to develop our skills and knowledge.

But do you ever read what should be a useful document, yet fail to gain any helpful information from it? Or, do you have to re-read something several times to get a full understanding of the content?

In this article, we're looking at strategies that will help you read more effectively. These approaches will help you get the maximum benefit from your reading, with the minimum effort.
Reading Strategies
Get the most from your reading.
© iStockphoto/mammamaart

Think About What You Want to Know

Before you start reading anything, ask yourself why you're reading it. Are you reading with a purpose, or just for pleasure? What do you want to know after you've read it?

Once you know your purpose, you can examine the resource to see whether it's going to help you.

For example, with a book, an easy way of doing this is to look at the introduction and the chapter headings. The introduction should let you know who the book is intended for, and what it covers. Chapter headings will give you an overall view of the structure of the subject.

Ask yourself whether the resource meets your needs, and try to work out if it will give you the right amount of knowledge. If you think that the resource isn't ideal, don't waste time reading it.

Remember that this also applies to content that you subscribe to, such as journals or magazines, and web-based RSS and social media news feeds - don't be afraid to prune these resources if you are not getting value from some publishers.


Know How Deeply to Study the Material

Where you only need the shallowest knowledge of a subject, you can skim material. Here you read only chapter headings, introductions, and summaries.

If you need a moderate level of information on a subject, then you can scan the text. This is when you read the chapter introductions and summaries in detail. You can then speed read the contents of the chapters, picking out and understanding key words and concepts. (When looking at material in this way, it's often worth paying attention to diagrams and graphs.)

Only when you need full knowledge of a subject is it worth studying the text in detail. Here it's best to skim the material first to get an overview of the subject. This gives you an understanding of its structure, into which you can then fit the detail gained from a full reading of the material. (SQ3R is a good technique for getting a deep understanding of a text.)


Read Actively

When you're reading a document or book in detail, it helps if you practice "active reading" by highlighting and underlining key information, and taking notes (member-only article) as you progress. (Mind Maps are great for this.) This emphasizes information in your mind, and helps you to review important points later.

Doing this also helps you keep your mind focused on the material, and stops you thinking about other things.


Tip:
If you're worried about damaging a book by marking it up, ask yourself how much your investment of time is worth. If the book is inexpensive, or if the benefit that you get from the book substantially exceeds its value, then don't worry too much about marking it. (Of course, only do this if it belongs to you!)

Know How to Study Different Types of Material

Different types of documents hold information in different places and in different ways, and they have different depths and breadths of coverage.

By understanding the layout of the material you're reading, you can extract the information you want efficiently.

Magazines and Newspapers

These tend to give a fragmented coverage of an area. They will typically only concentrate on the most interesting and glamorous parts of a topic - this helps them boost circulation! As such, they will often ignore less interesting information that may be essential to a full understanding of a subject, and they may include low value content to "pad out" advertising.

The most effective way of getting information from magazines is to scan the contents tables or indexes and turn directly to interesting articles. If you find an article useful, then cut it out and file it in a folder specifically covering that sort of information. In this way you will build up sets of related articles that may begin to explain the subject.

Newspapers tend to be arranged in sections. If you read a paper often, you can quickly learn which sections are useful, and which ones you can skip altogether.


Tip:
You can apply the same strategies to reading online versions of newspapers and magazines. However, you need to make sure that you don't get distracted by links to other, non-relevant material.


Reading Individual Articles

There are three main types of article in magazines and newspapers
:

  • News Articles - these are designed to explain the key points first, and then flesh these out with detail. So, the most important information is presented first, with information being less and less useful as the article progresses.

  • Opinion Articles - these present a point of view. Here the most important information is contained in the introduction and the summary, with the middle of the article containing supporting arguments.

  • Feature Articles - these are written to provide entertainment or background on a subject. Typically the most important information is in the body of the text.
If you know what you want from an article, and recognize its type, you can get information from it quickly and efficiently.

Tip 1:
Nowadays, you probably read many articles online. You can easily save links to these in a bookmark folder to reference later. Make sure that you title folders so that you can easily find the link again. For instance, you could have separate folders for project research, marketing, client prospects, trade information, and professional growth. Or, it might be helpful to title folders using the website or publication name.

Tip 2:
Remember that there are many online articles and electronic documents that weren't originally designed to be read on a screen. (This will also include documents that are emailed to you.) If you find it hard to read these on screen, print them out. This is especially important for long or detailed documents.

Make Your Own Table of Contents

When you're reading a document or book, it's easy to accept the writer's structure of thought. This means that you may not notice when important information has been left out, or that an irrelevant detail has been included.

An effective way to combat this is to make up your own table of contents before you start reading. Ask yourself what sections or topics you are expecting to see in this document, and what questions you want to have answered by the end of the text.

Although doing this before you start reading the document may sound like a strange strategy, it's useful, because it helps you spot holes in the author's argument. Writing out your own table of contents also helps you address your own questions, and think about what you're expecting to learn from the text.


Use Glossaries with Technical Documents

If you're reading large amounts of difficult technical material, it may be useful to use or compile a glossary. Keep this beside you as you read.

It's also useful to note down the key concepts in your own words, and refer to these when necessary.


Further Reading Tips
  • The time when you read a document plays a role in how easy the reading will be, and how much information you'll retain.

    If you need to read a text that is tedious, or requires a great deal of concentration, it's best to tackle it when you have the most energy in the day. Our article, Is This a Morning Task? (member-only article), helps you work out when this is, so that you can schedule your reading time accordingly.

  • Where you read is also important. Reading at night, in bed, doesn't work for many people because it makes them sleepy (which means that you may not remember the information). Everyone is different, however, so read in a place that's comfortable, free of distractions, and that has good light - this is important even if you're reading from a screen.

  • It can be helpful to review the information when you've finished reading. When you're done, write a paragraph that explains, in your own words, what you just learned. Often, putting pen to paper can help strengthen your recall of new information, so that you retain it more effectively.
Key Points:

If you want to read more effectively, identify what you want to learn from each resource you read, and know how deeply you want to study the material. And, consider "active reading" by making notes and marking-up the material as you go along. It's also useful to know how to study different types of material.

Making your own table of contents before you read material, and using glossaries for technical resources, are other useful reading strategies.

Remember that it takes practice to develop your reading skills - the more you use these strategies, the more effective you'll become.


Tip:
For more on how to select the most appropriate reading strategy in a specific situation, take our Bite-Sized Training session, Read Smarter! (members only).

Share this article: Follow Us on Twitter Follow Us on Facebook
A Final Note from James

The really great news about using these reading strategies is that not only will you learn more information, you'll also free up more time to get other things done. This is a great, double benefit!

In our next newsletter, we're looking at dealing with unhappy customers - and here's more good news: this doesn't need to be as painful as you might think! We'll be focusing on external clients and customers, but you can also the use the strategies that we'll explore on your "internal customers" too!

See you next time!


James
James Manktelow

email us
Mind Tools
Essential Skills for an Excellent Career!

Privacy Policy:
Mind Tools will treat your email address with complete respect and will not circulate it to any third party.

If you are not already a subscriber to this newsletter and you would like to be one, you can sign up at http://www.mindtools.com/subscribe.htm

If you have enjoyed this issue, please do email it on to your friends and co-workers.

To find out about new tools on the Mind Tools site the moment they're uploaded, click here to subscribe to the Mind Tools RSS feed (you'll need an RSS newsreader installed).

We welcome appropriate reprinting and reuse of Mind Tools material, but , you must get our permission first! To do this, please visit our Permissions Center.

© Mind Tools Ltd, 2011.


This newsletter is published by Mind Tools Ltd of 2nd Floor, 145-157 St John Street, London, EC1V 4PY, UK. You have received this email because you have confirmed that you want to receive it using our confirmed opt-in process. To unsubscribe, please use the link at the bottom of this email.

Mind Tools Ltd (Company Number 04829074, VAT Number: GB 840 1273 62) and Mind Tools (North America) Ltd (Company Number 05610859) are companies registered in England and Wales. Registered office: Hardwick House, Prospect Place, Swindon, Wiltshire, SN1 3LJ, United Kingdom.
Share on :
 
© Copyright ASEP HASAN NURDIN™ News & Shop 2011 - Some rights reserved | Powered by Blogger.com.
Template Design by Herdiansyah Hamzah | Published by Borneo Templates and Theme4all