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Nila Banton Smith (1889–1976)

Auteur de Speed Reading Made Easy

61 oeuvres 470 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Nila Banton Smith

Speed Reading Made Easy (1963) 135 exemplaires
Faster Reading Made Easy (1963) 20 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level B (1997) 16 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level C (1977) 13 exemplaires
Frontiers Old and New (1940) 13 exemplaires
At Home and Away (1935) 12 exemplaires
Down the Road (1945) 11 exemplaires
Through the Gate (1945) 11 exemplaires
On the Long Road (1943) 11 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level A (1950) 10 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level F (1997) 10 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level E (1997) 9 exemplaires
Bill and Susan (1945) 9 exemplaires
Round About You (1935) 9 exemplaires
Shining Hours (1960) 9 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level D (1997) 9 exemplaires
Time for Adventure (1960) 8 exemplaires
In City and Country (1938) 8 exemplaires
Distant Doorways 7 exemplaires
Fun All Around (1960) 6 exemplaires
Sunny and Gay (1960) 6 exemplaires
Foolish and Wise (1960) 6 exemplaires
In New Places (1943) 6 exemplaires
From Sea to Sea (1946) 6 exemplaires
Near and Far (1935) 5 exemplaires
Beyond the Horizon (1961) 5 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Level G (1997) 5 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Book VI (1977) 4 exemplaires
Under the Tree (1945) 4 exemplaires
With New Friends (1946) 3 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Book V (2001) 2 exemplaires
Tom's Trip 2 exemplaires
Be a Better Reader: Book IV (1971) 2 exemplaires
Our First Book (1946) 2 exemplaires
Over Hill and Plain (1947) 2 exemplaires
Be A Better Reader B 1 exemplaire
Be a Better Reader C 1 exemplaire
Be a Better Reader A 1 exemplaire
Be a Better Reader: Book I (1979) 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1889-10
Date de décès
1976
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Études
Columbia University
Professions
teacher
reading specialist
education administrator

Membres

Critiques

I think I actually acquired this about 1963 when I started university and I was trying to keep up my reading of literature whilst, at the same time, trying to engage with my science subjects like Physics and Chemistry. As I look through the book now and see my notes, written so long ago It brings back memories of reading whole books in the Fisher library in about an hour.....basically turning the pages more or less about one every couple of seconds. And it was a bit like the apocryphal guy who read "War and Peace" in two hours and when he was asked what it was about he was able to respond...."It's about Russia". This little book was set up as a work books with exercises and spaces to write your results and I notice that at one point there I achieved a reading speed of 576 wpm with 80% score on comprehension and in another couple of tests I achieved 380 wpm and 100% comprehension. But I also note some techniques which I still use almost unconsciously; that is I skim the book before i buy.....I read the summary on the back, I look at the contents and the paragraphs, are the footnotes? Are they descriptive or full of untranslated greek? I look at any illustrations or diagrams.....are they instructive and helpful? and usually I read a little where something takes my fancy. And when I want to read something fast...I use the skimming technique that this book recommends ....running your eye straight down the page not trying to sweep from side to side....not trying to take in every word but just getting the gist of what's going on. Yeah....I actually found this book really helpful and it probably has helped my reading speed considerably in some circumstances. I can read novels pretty fast. But I can't read Roger Penrose "Fashion, Faith and Fantasy in the new physics" fast. In fact, as I mainly read non fiction these days, I find that if I try and speed read then I just can't follow what's being said or follow the argument. Frequently I need to re-read stuff and consult other reference works etc. Bottom line, speed reading is ok for some kinds of reading but not for others. In fact, I have probably deliberately slowed my rate of reading over the years to actually savour and enjoy my reading. And, I sometimes have the feeling that if something can be speed read....then maybe it's not worth reading in the first place. Perhaps too harsh. This book is very dated now and i note that the author has an updated version out with the title "Speed Reading Made Easy"....but not sure if it deals with reading on the computer monitor or on the iphone or iPad....techniques which are pretty relevant today. But happy to give this version of the book four stars. I really gained a lot from it.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
booktsunami | Feb 1, 2023 |
I love this book! I have read it three times in 27 years. Everytime I read/study it, my reading speed doubles or better. Of course, the reason I read it is because I feel I'm falling back into old habits that slow my reading. Highly recommend it.
 
Signalé
M109Rider | 1 autre critique | Feb 27, 2008 |
This book was moderately useful to me. It's difficult to know how much of the success and failure was the book's fault and how much was my own implementation what the book said. In any case, I do think my speed improved some.
 
Signalé
AlexTheHunn | 1 autre critique | Oct 1, 2007 |
 
Signalé
laplantelibrary | Dec 7, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
61
Membres
470
Popularité
#52,371
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
5
ISBN
47
Langues
1

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