isee1st.com isee1st.com
   Site Home :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Place Your Link :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 

Self Help

 

Academics & Learning

 

Art & Culture

 

Society & Issues

 

Software & Networking

 

Hygiene & Health

 

News & Media

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Finance & Investment

 

Companies & Business

 

Sports

 

Malls & Shopping

 

Teens & Kids

 

Jobs & Careers

 

Entertainment

 

Automotive

 

Relationship & Lifestyle

 

Family & Home

 

Healthcare & Treatment

 

Science & Research

 

Law & Politics

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Estate & Realty

 

Cooking & Drinking

 
 

Site Home » Academics & Learning » Rapid Reading
 

Got Fast-Track Learning Yet?

 

Fast Track Learning?

Do you read with a musical background? Over 75% of students in a recent survey volunteered that studying was linked with listening to their favorite music.

Is there anything wrong with that? Back in the 1970s, a group of Rumanian teaching experts published a report and later a book, that listening to Mozart improved children's memory.

Recent experiments at the University of Southampton in Great Britain, report that even mild and incidental noise (music included), cause our pupils to dilate (widen and expand).

So What?

Ambient sound causes our eyes to change focus and blur the vision.

Please give us your undivided attention: studying in a library where people whisper in conversation; listening to Mozart or Rock - and worse of all - listening to Rappers on your earphones - reduce comprehension and long-term memory up to 70%.

You can read but not link and associate original ideas with previous long-term memories. Time passes, but no learning occurs. External sound - voices or rhythmic music disconnect your attention and plug up your communication sources.

Learning only occurs when there is a focused-attention on comprehension and association of ideas - new with old concepts. Reading must involve Broca's and Wernicke's areas of the brain or you are snoozing. Noise causes a disruption of your connections.

Solution

When we surveyed executives on their reading habits, they reported reading while viewing TV, during conferences, and when listening to relaxing music.

Only 20% stated they required total silence and an interrupted segment of time, in order read important contracts, reports or memos.

The result of testing executive comprehension after reading professional level text was less than spectacular. They scored 70% on basic (12th grade level), reading material comparable to Reader's Digest; 60% on Semi-Tuff material such as journals or Wall Street Journal articles.

On Tuff-Stuff like financial statements, economic reports, and agreements, the average college graduate executive scored an embarrassing 50% on comprehension and recall.

The Butterfly Effect

How about a small change that produces Massive-Reactions in learning and long-term memory?

Use Earplugs to control your environment. Prior and during your study session, and while taking an exam - do not leave home without your personal earplugs, and use them to optimize your skills. It can produce an improvement of up to 38%.

If you are preparing for a presentation or interview, spend 15 minutes in your own artificial zone-of-silence by wearing your earplugs prior to your entering the room.

In an experiment using earplugs, or no-earplugs - before a presentation or interview - executives subjectively report an enhanced sense of confidence, ability to communicate, and reduction of stress and tension.

The Butterfly Effect - Small changes lead to massive-reactions, is the work of Edward Lorenz, MIT. He asked the question about predictability: Does the flap of a butterfly's wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas?

Here we find that the earplugs-group compared to the control-group - performs up to 50% better in communication, self-confidence and reduced stress.

Endwords

The use of Phonic backgrounds during learning is an urban-myth without any redeeming benefits. Babies do not grow up with the mental prowess of Dr. Einstein because they are subjected to Mozart in the crib.

It may be counterintuitive, but any consistent sound - chatter, whispered conversations and music (of any kind), lowers your attention and focus on learning, and distorts memory formation.

The solution of living in a zone-of-silence is a non-starter, but the use of hidden earplugs during reading sessions is a small-change that leads to Massive-Reactions.

Consider using the Benjamin Franklin evaluation - he called it Prudential-Algebra. List on the left-hand column all the negative-reasons to not use earplugs as previously delineated. One example to consider: your associates will think you - weird. A counter question is: do they pay your annual income?

Your right-hand column consists of all the benefits accruing from the periodic use of your earplugs during learning segments of time.

Be a scientist and conduct your personal experiments.

Do not be surprised when you meet CEOs of international companies who have forgotten to remove their earplugs. Some claim they function better hearing less of their most common communications; sort of like the delete button on your email.

Coda:

When you have everything to gain and nothing to lose - test the premise.

Later you may want to recommend earplugs to your team - take full credit, but suggest learning speed reading.

Would it be a competitive-advantage and place your team on the Fast-Track, to read-and-remember three books, articles, and reports in the time others can hardly finish one?

See ya,

copyright 2006
H. Bernard Wechsler
www.speedlearning.org
hbw@speedlearning.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Author: H. Bernard Wechsler
 
Author Bio:
H. Bernard Wechsler is a popular columnist. H. likes to pen down articles about this area.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Honolulu Colleges
 
Questions to Ask a Computer Repair School Before You Put Down your Money
 
Conference Smarts: Making the Most of Your Time and Money
 
How Far Does Frequency Travel?
 
Academic Competence Questioned
 
What to Expect from Judges at Science Fairs
 
Managing the World; Future of Corporations and One World Governments
 
Culinary Arts Is It for You
 
Homeschooling - Shape Your Child's Future
 
The Joys Of Self-Publishing
 
 
 
 
 

Need to take TESOL Exam

The question arises about the need to take the TESOL exam (24/05/2006) - Kris Koonar
 

Business Degree Basics

Do you have the talents to exell in business school? Read on and see. (25/05/2006) - Melissa Steele
 

Othello - An Essay and Review

Even before we, as an audience, have had a chance to meet Othello and Desdemona we learn that the ma ... - Mike Copper
 
 

Writing a Book's Marketing Plan for Maximum Profit

Much has been written about book proposals. But less has been written about book marketing plans. Th ... - Roger C. Parker
 

Tips to Get your Query Letter Noticed!

How can you make your query letter stand out from the rest? I offer some tips to make your letter on ... - Michelle Dunn
 
 
Site Home :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.isee1st.com - All Rights Reserved.