Sunday, June 30, 2013

Speed Reading is...



… a farce.

There seem to be a slew of applications (you know them as apps) that purport to increase one’s reading speed. Worse, there are even more blogs and articles out there eating the concept up. Wish I could be as enamored but my years of experience as a reading teacher struggle mightily to be as excited about these products as others seem to be. I’m actually dubious that any of those writing about these apps have actually used them for more than an hour or two or taken the time to reflect on their efficacy.

I’m of the opinion that speed reading apps, especially the older you are, are akin to buying snake oil and hair tonic –loads of promises with nothing more like to occur than a placebo result and a sense of being swindled.

I downloaded and tested two apps, Fastr and ReadQuick, several months ago. (I picked these two simply because they were free the day I discovered them.) Both programs are fundamentally the same in their execution: you see words flashed quickly on the screen, you “read” them, and then hope to keep up. Where they diverge is in what materials you can use to practice your reading speed. 

ReadQuick will let you read articles from sites like The Morning News, The Feature, and Longreads, though you’re not really limited because you can import from any site. You can set the rate of words displayed from 100 to 800 words per minute (WPM). ReadQuick displays one word at a time once you turned it on. The program also provides stats for you such as the number of articles and words you’ve read in a week, month, or year.

Fastr works more with existing books, ones without DRM. Unlike ReadQuick, you have the options of seeing one word at a time on the screen, or several. Fastr also predetermines, based on book length and the rate of reading you choose using an adjustable meter, how long it will take you to speed read the book you’ve selected.

For this blog, I’m going to stick with my experience using Fastr as my example.

I downloaded Treasure Island as my practice book. I was shown that, set to 100-words per minute, I would complete “reading” chapter one of Treasure Island in 24 minutes and 46 seconds. This time remains the same whether choosing to have one word at a time presented to me or several. Sounds okay to me, but then again so does a miracle hair tonic.
I started with method one, trying to read one word at a time. The weakness to seeing one word at a time becomes fabulously apparent when seeing the first sentence of the book. It follows:

Chapter 1 The Old Sea-dog at the Admiral, Benbow, Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey, and the rest of the gentlemen having asked me to write down the whole particulars about Treasure Island, from the beginning to the end, keeping nothing back but the bearings of the island, and that only because there is still treasure not yet lifted, I take up my pen in the year of grace 17-, and go back to the time when my father kept the Admiral Benbow inn and the brown old seaman with the sabre cut first tool up his lodging under our roof.

In case you missed it, that’s a chapter numeration, a chapter title, and the first sentence of the book. Even with it presented before me in its entirety, it’s a daunting series of information to retain and understand. And yet… Fastr would have you believe that in seeing one word at a time, and with continual practice, you will eventually be speeding through such densely written text. Pi-shaw, I say. Pi-shaw in my language means: Yeah, you may read more quickly, but you’re grasp of what you’ve read will be its inverse.

More amazing, or is that ridiculous, to me is that you can ramp up the program to a reading speed of 1,600 WPM. That’s not a typo. One thousand and six hundred words per minute. The program informs you that at this speed you will have finished chapter one of Treasure Island in a tight 1 minute and 32 seconds! Even better, you’ll have more hair on your head than you did when you were eighteen! (Special note: I may have made that last part up.)

At 1,600 WPM you cannot see but a few words between the blur of everything else claiming to be words. I tried reading this way using the multiple words aspect and met with the same issue. Namely, what level of Dante’s Hell does this activity take place? To be somewhat fair, only somewhat, you’re supposed to work your way up to this level. No go 100 to 1,600 in one sitting. I’m on the verge of writing pi-shaw again. 

Now, before I get assailed by the individuals behind these apps, let me note a few things. Yes, you can increase your rate of reading. I work with a handful of students every year specifically in this regard. These are students reading around a rate of 60-70 WPM when I first start with them. 60-70 WPM is generally regarded as too slow for their age (11-12) and academic setting. With a lot of repeated and timed reading of short passages, nearly all improve their reading rate. Most will find themselves reading closer to 100-125 WPM after half a year of guidance. There are of course the usual outliers.

What differentiates what I’m doing, when compared to the hollow promises of speed reading apps, is how I approach the task. I work with the entire text before the student, not one word at a time, or even a few words at a time. Students need to see words in chunks and sentences. Many troubled readers already tend focus on one word at a time, which both slows them down and impacts their comprehension. (By the way, I haven’t even touched this critical component yet.)

Students hear me read the passage in question aloud. This is done to build their understanding of how to read different types of writing, to develop their ear for reading. There is such a thing as having an ear for reading. We teach, for example, the very young to elevate their voices when learning to grasp how to read a question mark. The same work goes into helping slower reading students understand how to read a light-hearted poem versus a straightforward passage in science. You simply don’t read them the say way or at the same rate. Faster is not going to help a student one darn bit in an unfamiliar reading situation or when a text becomes too complex. (Refer to the excerpt of Treasure Island.)

Reading is not about speed, it’s about understanding. I’ve worked with dozens and dozens of accurate, fast-reading, student over the years who’ve not a clue as to what it all meant. Teachers commonly refer to these types of readers as word callers. Programs like Fastr and ReadQuick amount to the same thing. Call out words faster and you’ll be a better reader. Nuts. 

Most reading WPM charts suggest that students top out at 199 WPM by grade 8. And, those students who are reading aloud that quickly are in the 90th percentile as oral readers. The 50th percentile, which is where some 80% of us fall, is 150 WPM. Silently we can and do read more quickly, but not by much. Again in grade 8, the average rate of silent reading per minute falls somewhere around 185-205 WPM. At the college level, 250-270 WPM is regarded as an adequate average. Keep in mind that all of these averages include a measure of understanding on the student’s end.

The key, for this teacher of reading, is always final understanding; and I don’t see how speed reading apps -with their extremely narrow approaches- help in that regard. Even in my work with helping improve a student’s rate of reading, I’m working constantly on their flow of reading and comprehension.

In my experience, readers who finish first in class and maintain great understanding are not the norm. I’ve also learned, again through years of observation, that those handful of students just happen to have spent a lot of their idle time reading, from books, not speed-reading apps. That’s why they’re generally quicker. Lot’s of actual reading having occurred.
Think of it this way. You want to become a wine aficionado, which means spending a lot of time learning about grapes, soil content and rainfall patterns, to name a few things. It also means sampling a lot of wine. Does gulping sample after sample of wine, out of context and as quickly as you can, make you more experienced and knowledgeable about them? I sincerely doubt it. And yet, programs like Fastr and ReadQuick would have you believe this.

Reading is the same way. You need to savor at points what you’ve read, to roll the information and language around in your mouth for a while before you pass judgments or draw conclusions about it. 

Speaking of wine…

These are the sources I used as supporting data for this post.