Before learning to speed read, know how to measure your reading speed

Various studies describe the amount of time spent reading at work. Usually it’s about 2 hours a day or about 24% of the time at work. Improving your reading speed can be a productivity boost.

What you measure improves, what you focus on increases. Before trying to improve your reading speed, it makes sense to first measure your starting speed. Most people can’t even guess how fast they read, while others estimate too slow a speed similar to their typing speed, like 80 or 90 words per minute (wpm).

Here’s an easy way to calculate your rate using your own reading material. Although there are online reading tests, they usually give you a result without allowing you to monitor and measure your reading speed at any time on any type of reading material.

what you will need

– Books – Pocket or hard cover book (to facilitate the calculation). Make sure it’s easy-to-read fiction or nonfiction.

– Timer – countdown timer, stopwatch, clock or clock with second hand.

– pocket calculator

– Two paper clips or sticky notes or a pencil to mark start and end points

Instructions

1. Identify the starting point

Ignore any preface, foreword, or introduction and start at Chapter One of the book. Attach a paper clip, sticky note, or pencil to indicate your starting point.

2. Read for 3 minutes.

When you’re ready, turn on the stopwatch and start reading for 3 minutes for good comprehension, that is, for excellent comprehension and enjoyment. At 3 minutes, stop reading and place a pencil mark, paper clip, or sticky note to indicate your end point.

3. Check recovery

To check your recall, turn the book upside down and spend 30 seconds jotting down a few notes about what you can remember. Better yet, set up this reading quiz with a friend or colleague and trade a 30-second summary.

Decide if your abstract was:

– Great

– Very well

-Well

-Average

-Just

– Below average

4. Calculate read rate

Now calculate your reading rate in words per minute. To do this, count the total number of words read and then divide by the number of minutes spent reading, following the steps below:

a) Count words per line

To calculate the average number of words per line, count the total number of words in three lines and divide by three. (A word must have two letters to count.) The usual result in paperbacks is about 10 words per line. In hard cover it is 12 to 13 words per line.

b) Count the number of lines read

Then count the total number of lines you read. (Two half lines count as one line.)

c) Calculate the total number of words read

For total words read, multiply the number of lines by the number of words per line.

d) words per minute

Divide the total number of words read by the number of minutes spent reading.

Here is the formula:

___ Lines X Words Per Line = _____ Total Words ÷ 3 = _____ WPM

Results:

– If your reading rate is between 200 and 300 words per minute, that is an average reading rate. Most people read at this rate.

– If your reading speed is less than 200 words per minute, did you choose technical reading material with a high degree of difficulty? This can slow down the reading speed. Or do you tend to read technical or scientific material at a slow pace so that everything you read is at the same slow pace?

– If your reading speed is above 400 words per minute, it indicates that you are not as affected by poor reading habits, such as subvocalization (hearing each word in your head as you read) or regression (eye flicking back to reread a word). ; most readers go back 50 or 60 times per page) or fixation (reading one word at a time with narrow focus).

– If your reading rate is above 1000 words per minute, congratulations; that’s a great result. If you also rated your comprehension and memory as excellent to very good, then you are a speed reader.

Now that you know your current reading speed, the next step is to learn how to read faster.

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