Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes

hipster man in trilby hat with t-shirt that says "i like words" reading a newspaper while sitting on a loading dock.

(Photo: Dustin Diaz)

How much more could you get done if you completed all of your required reading in 1/3 or 1/5 the time?

Increasing reading speed is a process of controlling fine motor movement—period.

This post is a condensed overview of principles I taught to undergraduates at Princeton University in 1998 at a seminar called the “PX Project.” The below was written several years ago, so it’s worded like Ivy Leaguer pompous-ass prose, but the results are substantial. In fact, while on an airplane in China two weeks ago, I helped Glenn McElhose increase his reading speed 34% in less than 5 minutes.

I have never seen the method fail. Here’s how it works…

The PX Project

The PX Project, a single 3-hour cognitive experiment, produced an average increase in reading speed of 386%.

It was tested with speakers of five languages, and even dyslexics were conditioned to read technical material at more than 3,000 words-per-minute (wpm), or 10 pages per minute. One page every 6 seconds. By comparison, the average reading speed in the US is 200-300 wpm (1/2 to 1 page per minute), with the top 1% of the population reading over 400 wpm…

If you understand several basic principles of the human visual system, you can eliminate inefficiencies and increase speed while improving retention.

To perform the exercises in this post and see the results, you will need: a book of 200+ pages that can lie flat when open, a pen, and a timer (a stop watch with alarm or kitchen timer is ideal). You should complete the 20 minutes of exercises in one session.

First, several definitions and distinctions specific to the reading process:

A) Synopsis: You must minimize the number and duration of fixations per line to increase speed.

You do not read in a straight line, but rather in a sequence of saccadic movements (jumps). Each of these saccades ends with a fixation, or a temporary snapshot of the text within you focus area (approx. the size of a quarter at 8 inches from reading surface). Each fixation will last ¼ to ½ seconds in the untrained subject. To demonstrate this, close one eye, place a fingertip on top of that eyelid, and then slowly scan a straight horizontal line with your other eye-you will feel distinct and separate movements and periods of fixation.

B) Synopsis: You must eliminate regression and back-skipping to increase speed.

The untrained subject engages in regression (conscious rereading) and back-skipping (subconscious rereading via misplacement of fixation) for up to 30% of total reading time.

C) Synopsis: You must use conditioning drills to increase horizontal peripheral vision span and the number of words registered per fixation.

Untrained subjects use central focus but not horizontal peripheral vision span during reading, foregoing up to 50% of their words per fixation (the number of words that can be perceived and “read” in each fixation).

The Protocol

You will 1) learn technique, 2) learn to apply techniques with speed through conditioning, then 3) learn to test yourself with reading for comprehension.

These are separate, and your adaptation to the sequencing depends on keeping them separate. Do not worry about comprehension if you are learning to apply a motor skill with speed, for example. The adaptive sequence is: technique ‘ technique with speed ‘ comprehensive reading testing.

As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 2,700 words-per-minute, or 6 pages per minute (10 seconds per page).

We will cover two main techniques in this introduction:

1) Trackers and Pacers (to address A and B above)

2) Perceptual Expansion (to address C)

First – Determining Baseline

To determine your current reading speed, take your practice book (which should lay flat when open on a table) and count the number of words in 5 lines. Divide this number of words by 5, and you have your average number of words-per-line.

Example: 62 words/5 lines = 12.4, which you round to 12 words-per-line

Next, count the number of text lines on 5 pages and divide by 5 to arrive at the average number of lines per page. Multiply this by average number of words-per-line, and you have your average number of words per page.

Example: 154 lines/5 pages = 30.8, rounded to 31 lines per page x 12 words-per-line = 372 words per page

Mark your first line and read with a timer for 1 minute exactly-do not read faster than normal, and read for comprehension. After exactly one minute, multiply the number of lines by your average words-per-line to determine your current words-per-minute (wpm) rate.

Second – Trackers and Pacers

Regression, back-skipping, and the duration of fixations can be minimized by using a tracker and pacer. To illustrate the importance of a tracker-did you use a pen or finger when counting the number of words or lines in above baseline calculations? If you did, it was for the purpose of tracking-using a visual aid to guide fixation efficiency and accuracy. Nowhere is this more relevant than in conditioning reading speed by eliminating such inefficiencies.

For the purposes of this article, we will use a pen. Holding the pen in your dominant hand, you will underline each line (with the cap on), keeping your eye fixation above the tip of the pen. This will not only serve as a tracker, but it will also serve as a pacer for maintaining consistent speed and decreasing fixation duration. You may hold it as you would when writing, but it is recommended that you hold it under your hand, flat against the page.

1) Technique (2 minutes):

Practice using the pen as a tracker and pacer. Underline each line, focusing above the tip of the pen. DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION. Keep each line to a maximum of 1 second, and increase the speed with each subsequent page. Read, but under no circumstances should you take longer than 1 second per line.

2) Speed (3 minutes):

Repeat the technique, keeping each line to no more than ½ second (2 lines for a single “one-one-thousand”). Some will comprehend nothing, which is to be expected. Maintain speed and technique-you are conditioning your perceptual reflexes, and this is a speed exercise designed to facilitate adaptations in your system. Do not decrease speed. ½ second per line for 3 minutes; focus above the pen and concentrate on technique with speed. Focus on the exercise, and do not daydream.

Third – Perceptual Expansion

If you focus on the center of your computer screen (focus relating to the focal area of the fovea in within the eye), you can still perceive and register the sides of the screen. Training peripheral vision to register more effectively can increase reading speed over 300%. Untrained readers use up to ½ of their peripheral field on margins by moving from 1st word to last, spending 25-50% of their time “reading” margins with no content.

To illustrate, let us take the hypothetical one line: “Once upon a time, students enjoyed reading four hours a day.” If you were able to begin your reading at “time” and finish the line at “four”, you would eliminate 6 of 11 words, more than doubling your reading speed. This concept is easy to implement and combine with the tracking and pacing you’ve already practiced.

1) Technique (1 minute):

Use the pen to track and pace at a consistent speed of one line per second. Begin 1 word in from the first word of each line, and end 1 word in from the last word.

DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION. Keep each line to a maximum of 1 second, and increase the speed with each subsequent page. Read, but under no circumstances should you take longer than 1 second per line.

2) Technique (1 minute):

Use the pen to track and pace at a consistent speed of one line per second. Begin 2 words in from the first word of each line, and end 2 words in from the last word.

3) Speed (3 minutes):

Begin at least 3 words in from the first word of each line, and end 3 words in from the last word. Repeat the technique, keeping each line to no more than ½ second (2 lines for a single “one-one-thousand”).

Some will comprehend nothing, which is to be expected. Maintain speed and technique-you are conditioning your perceptual reflexes, and this is a speed exercise designed to facilitate adaptations in your system. Do not decrease speed. ½ second per line for 3 minutes; focus above the pen and concentrate on technique with speed. Focus on the exercise, and do not daydream.

Fourth – Calculate New WPM Reading Speed

Mark your first line and read with a timer for 1 minute exactly- Read at your fastest comprehension rate. Multiply the number of lines by your previously determined average words-per-line to get determine your new words-per-minute (wpm) rate.

Congratulations on completing your cursory overview of some of the techniques that can be used to accelerate human cognition (defined as the processing and use of information).

Final recommendations: If used for study, it is recommended that you not read 3 assignments in the time it would take you to read one, but rather, read the same assignment 3 times for exposure and recall improvement, depending on relevancy to testing.

Happy trails, page blazers.

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Related and Recommended Posts:

Tim Ferriss interviewed by Derek Sivers

Tim Ferriss articles on Huffington Post

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ROCILDA MAHE
ROCILDA MAHE
9 years ago

Você fala várias línguas, mas o seu blog não é apenas em inglês!

Alice
Alice
9 years ago

Wow! Increased my speed from 184 wpm to 320 wpm! I’m impressed

Coaching
Coaching
8 years ago

Is the big deal for me!

Thanks..

Mark
Mark
8 years ago

Did anyone else have problems with nausea doing this? I’ve just started a few hours ago but really feel some sort of motion sickness towards this. Will it go away as my brain gets used to the increased speed? I love the technique but I am not usually prone to motion sickness so just wondering what is going on.

lala
lala
8 years ago

I love how my eyes are literally dancing over the pages now unlike before. This article has really helped me, now all I have to do is practice this technique enough so it’s my perminant reading style. Thanx guys! !

Kevin Wells
Kevin Wells
8 years ago

Great stuff! I was very skeptical about possibly wasting my time but I increased my reading speed by over 200 words per minute.

Thanks for posting this!

Kw

Terry Simpson
Terry Simpson
8 years ago

With so much book reading done on phones/kindles/pads, how does this concept continue to work? The phones basically remove the whitespace between margins and your left with only a few pages per line anyway.

mrripple
mrripple
8 years ago

The control freak of my personality keeps getting in the way. I fear that I am missing something when I am reading so fast. This is counter intuitive to how I’ve always done my reading – slow, methodical dog-earring and underlining and annotating along the way. This probably explains why I only get through 25-30 books a year.

So I guess my big question is this – how do you make sure when you are doing this process not to miss the big points and how do y/ou personally come back to capture them (highlight, underline, etc.) or do you

bijan
bijan
8 years ago

hello, I want to know, how speed reading can memorise 10 pages in one minute? with what mechanism words stay in memory and brain. no one speak about this. thank you.

bijan
bijan
8 years ago
Reply to  bijan

and I point that: we know when we speak,when we hear,when we act our lesson, it can better save in our memmory (better neural communication in neurology)

so what is neurological reson in speed reading?

unive Obsava
unive Obsava
7 years ago
Reply to  bijan

When you get out of its way the brain will start encoding and compressing the concepts so you will know what you read. At some point you will start remembering the phrases if you keep instructing it too. But you will need sugar if you are gonna be doing that kind of superman reading, so eat before you read.

chimapaschalp starlight
chimapaschalp starlight
8 years ago

meen…thanks at least now am a good reader now thank you very much I know finish more than 500 with techniques

Steve
Steve
8 years ago

Wow Tim! I always knew I was a slow reader but even at slow speeds my comprehension is still bad! This exercise took me from 240 to 505/minute which I’m over the moon about.

I’d love some tips about improving compression and retaining what you read.

apz2000
apz2000
8 years ago

I am trying this technique but I don’t know if I am the only one with the issue that I feel I am not getting what i “read” and comprehend. If anyone had the same problem/feeling please let me know how or what you did to manage it.

Thanks for this blog post.

Cheers

Rudy
Rudy
8 years ago

Wow, just read this!

I wish I would have had something like this while I was in High School. Reading would have been faster !

Yet there is something that I am doing wrong as I am Still not understanding how to do this so I can read faster or how should I start to put this information in effect. Hope some one can help. Thanks !

Kelly Jarrett
Kelly Jarrett
8 years ago

Thanks for your work, Tim. This is a great one, but your oevre is now chockablock with great stuff. Quick question on this. Now that most of us use iPads and Kindles for much or the bulk of our reading. Have you found any research or do you have tips for how to get similar gains using those modalities? If you have already answered this one 100 times my apologies.

Rachid
Rachid
8 years ago

Really amazing, I have been looking for a way t o speed my reading for months. Fast reading means a more books and more books mean a better life. Thank you so much

Alan Young
Alan Young
8 years ago

Wow that’s insane. I’ve just read an 180 page book in a few hours. Normally it would take me a week of stoping and starting. Thanks for sharing these speed reading tips with me 🙂

Vaibhav Toshniwal
Vaibhav Toshniwal
8 years ago

How can I improve my speed reading when reading on a laptop or PC? I am essentially going to take GMAT exam and Reading comprehension takes too much time. Kindly help.

Nuha
Nuha
8 years ago

this is exactly what I have to do, only it’s for the ukcat! same issue

teetolz
teetolz
8 years ago

From 176 wpm to 594!!!!! Thank you so much!

henry hemasath
henry hemasath
8 years ago

I don’t get how this works

Brandon
Brandon
8 years ago

I started off with roughly about 220 WPM and ended up with 480 WPM in just 20 minutes. Wow, this is amazing.

emeraldds
emeraldds
8 years ago

This does work! I went from a slow 110 WPM to 440 WPM after completing this exercise! Thank you!

emeraldds
emeraldds
8 years ago
Reply to  emeraldds

Now I’m 187. This does not last, and it has only been a few days.

technickal1
technickal1
8 years ago
Reply to  emeraldds

I’m pretty sure it’s a technique and it takes practice to make it last. Just a thought.

technickal1
technickal1
8 years ago

I have to admit that even after reading the four hour work week and hearing about this technique, I was skeptical. But, after just sitting down and practicing, I FELT myself reading faster. I went from 253 to 385 wpm! Please do this because it will train you to save time in your life.

Nuha
Nuha
8 years ago

how would you apply this to something you have to read off a computer screen, same rules apply?\

Alexander Modica
Alexander Modica
8 years ago

“As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute, or 6 pages per minute (10 seconds per page).” Typo…3x target reading speed would be 2,700 wpm not 1,800…

Brent Phillips
Brent Phillips
8 years ago

I tried this method and love it, so far I have increased my WPM from 232 wpm to 464 wpm in just 2 days using this method! Thank you Tim Ferris love the 4 hour work week. My one question is what is your most recommended book to read that discusses speed reading in depth?

george
george
8 years ago

Great. What about the most important element though: comprehension? [Third phase in the adaptive sequence; seemingly not addressed in the content – Did I miss it …?]

Julian
Julian
8 years ago

Where is the more comprehensive breakdown of the speed reading tutorial? I like it. So far I have doubled my words but I want more.

dsaquin
dsaquin
8 years ago

I’ve always had trouble reading at a fast pace..worse than that I felt like I was wasting time with the pace that I was going, plus the rereading. Thanks for sharing this, Tim! You rock 🙂

Isaac A
Isaac A
8 years ago

I’ve tried reading faster, but simply by adding a visual tracking technique such as your suggestion, I increased my reading speed by 250%. This is legit.

OlléS
OlléS
8 years ago

Finally. A good tip on reading faster. I have tried it many times before. But now I have a tool I can come back to and hone the skill.

Very usefull as I need to read a lot for my Masters Project.

Went from 241wpm to 396wpm. Not astonishing but still better than before.

I had a lot of issues with the 1sec 2lines. How the f… can you keep that speed with the pen and focus on the tip. I constantly loose it and this is frustrating. No matter how much I concentrate..

Tim any tips? Would be very appreciated.

And thumbs up for your 100+ Podcasts you have so far..

Sean OK
Sean OK
8 years ago

Or use Word Runner in the Kindle software-easier and faster!

Stefano
Stefano
8 years ago

Thanks Tim for sharing this fantastic technique! I’ve been trying this since few days but the point I don’t really get is: do i have to focus on the tip of the pen or focus on the words?!

Aashish Kariya
Aashish Kariya
8 years ago

I read your book. Its awesome. Helping me yo change my way of working. Thanks.

Matt
Matt
8 years ago

This definitely helped, but I’d like to make the improvement permanent. Do you have any suggestions on a routine to do a few times a week? Obviously I could repeat the above excerises, but I was wondering if there were any others. In the 4-Hour Work week you mention having taught a speed reading class.. what else did you teach those students in that sessoin?

Thanks,

Dyslexic that really wants to read fast

Oscar Wan
Oscar Wan
8 years ago

Hi, I’ve just started listening to your podcasts and looking at your website. Very engaging and interesting interviewees so am hooked!

Nicolas Leone
Nicolas Leone
8 years ago

Awesome sauce! I went from 650 wpm to 1,100 wpm in just 25 minutes! What a game-changer!

shoeb
shoeb
8 years ago

this obviously is increasing my speed but i am unable to understand what i am reading when i read so quickly so how can i do both effectively i.e understang readig quickly

heyguuthorn
heyguuthorn
8 years ago

I’m a big note taker when I read, particularly for non-fiction. I usually underline an especially relevant sentence then compile all my underlined passages after I finish the chapter.

Do you have any advice for notetaking while speed reading? It was tough to find the right flow.

dobecker
dobecker
8 years ago

I had almost no improvement after doing these exercises for at least 45 minutes. I just went from 235 wpm to 260wpm and im think i could have make the 260 in before if i hadnt focused on reading in ‘normal’ speed.

velikword
velikword
8 years ago

In the end, I didn’t understand which is the final technique to use, as there are a few exercises, but in the end it just says “Read at your fastest comprehension rate” without pointing out which technique to use.

Even though I increased my speed by 140%, I was confused as to which technique to use, so I just stuck with reading one word after the first word and stopping one word before the last word of each line while trying to keep time spent on each line to not more than a second.

Which technique did you guys use? I assume it was not the one from the final exercise ( Start/Finish 3 words after/before the first/last word and spending 0,5 seconds per line.) since it presumes the lowest comprehension rate.

Bill
Bill
8 years ago

I just read your 4HWW book and enjoyed it very much and am brainstorming autopilot business ideas. Here’s the thing–your book says see http://www.pxmethod,com for an example test page. However, that web address apparently expired 12/18/2015. Could you please check into this and renew the page? Thanks.

Johannes Gangsö
Johannes Gangsö
8 years ago

Great! Didn’t think that reading skills could be trained in that way.

From 191 wpm to 429 wpm on Finnish (a language with looong words)

Jose R Fuentes
Jose R Fuentes
8 years ago

Just an observation: The math does not work: 900×3=2700 not 1,800??? It is maybe a typo?

“As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute, or 6 pages per minute (10 seconds per page).”

Richard Harrington
Richard Harrington
8 years ago

Wow, this article is a gold nugget in a world of largely silver and bronze. Try this technique for a few hours and a lot of you will be blazing through text with better comprehension just like I am. At best, my reading was at a mere 280wpm before stumbling upon this article. After a couple hours of focused effort, I am getting at least three times out of my time investment.

The increased comprehension is even more priceless though. Previously I’d get completely side-tracked back-tracking sentences; this would ruin my overall comprehension of the text. Now I have a better understanding of the big picture all while increasing the speed I’m able to assimilate the information.

I am so impressed, I felt compelled to come here and share. Thanks for sharing this Tim.

Govind Sharma
Govind Sharma
8 years ago

How reading fast help me to score better marks?

Shri Krishan Baghel
Shri Krishan Baghel
8 years ago

I will try your suggestions in my day to day life … THANK YOU !!!

trackback

[…] Tim Ferriss, author of the 4-Hour Workweek and a handful of other bestsellers, is one of the leading voices in lifehacks, experiments, and getting things done. So it’s no wonder that he has a speed-reading method to boost your reading speed threefold. […]

Pernille de Neergaard
Pernille de Neergaard
8 years ago

I like Howard Berg’s speed reading method:

http://youtu.be/_dKXwgwWdS8

http://youtu.be/Ilvoigdxhzo

Shaista
Shaista
8 years ago

It’s really cool way to teach reading at faster pace. Thank You.

work
work
7 years ago

Hey Tim. I note of gratitude for doing what you do: deliver outstanding value. This speed reading article has increased by comprehension reading speed by 97% within one hour. I have a list of books to devour! Have an amazing day. Paul

Tony Ciudad
Tony Ciudad
7 years ago

Ey Tim, you says “As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute, or 6 pages per minute (10 seconds per page).”

Doing maths, I think you should practice at 2,700 (9×3) words per minute.

It´s only that.

Great article, I like it!!! 😀

Dean
Dean
7 years ago

Hi Tim (if you see this) I assume you have seen apps like Rush Reader, implementing this technology http://spritzinc.com which gets around the same issues you address in the training, by streaming the word letters in a single position on the screen. 700wpm is not hard to read with this.

Bobby Jones
Bobby Jones
7 years ago

I am an avid believer in speed reading as I enjoy reading a new book every week. I think that the main thing to consider though is how fast one can actually read before they lose comprehension at a rate that makes reading pointless. It’s about being realistic. I didn’t even realize how slow I was reading (due to re-reading) until I took some classes. Not a reading roadrunner, but definitely faster than I was.

Paul
Paul
7 years ago

I felt like I was reading twice faster just trying the first few steps myself in this very article. I am positive about this. This is a very helpful tool for anyone.

LGT
LGT
7 years ago

“As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute”

Wouldn’t you want to practice technique at a rate of 2,700 wpm?

Grace Davis
Grace Davis
7 years ago

Thank you so much for this! I increased from about 400 wpm to 600 wpm!

Frank Medley
Frank Medley
7 years ago

Going to try this simple and useful technology

mrao
mrao
7 years ago

This didn’t work for me. how do i know where i am going wrong in this exercise?

Tammy
Tammy
7 years ago

How do you comprehend what your reading by doing this? Do you enjoy what your reading? It feels like your just getting the idea of it by scheming? Is this true, please tell me how your comprehension is with speed reading, I am very interested but don’t see a point if don’t understand what I just read.

shima
shima
7 years ago

but how about comprehension?how do u comprehend the material using this method?

Vani
Vani
7 years ago

Very useful techniques

michael
michael
7 years ago

Where is the muse test page for PX method mentioned in your book? I thought it was on your website?

Thanks

ryanhinchman28
ryanhinchman28
7 years ago

Great overview of a topic I have been interested in. Of course in addition to reading fast I want to comprehend what I am reading. I took a speed reading class in Santa Cruz but was unable to use it for school since my reading comprehension dropped as WPM increased. Ryan Hinchman

Noor marjan afiridi from pakistan
Noor marjan afiridi from pakistan
7 years ago

very good ideas are there in your suggestions and directions about reading… NOOR From pakistan thank you

Derek
Derek
7 years ago

WOW. I am a very slow reader. I have spent the bulk of my years swinging a hammer. This little exercise put me from 110 wpm to 290 wpm. That is amazing. I cant believe the change in just 20 minutes.

Paul Tashman
Paul Tashman
7 years ago

In the “final recommendations”, when you say “read the same assignment 3 times for exposure and recall improvement”, are you not admitting that this method reduces comprehension?

Christina
Christina
7 years ago

I am literally so happy I found and read this page. Thank you so much Tim. Following a comment from my partner this afternoon, who told me I read really fast. I thought I didn’t and it made me think about speed reading and taking a course – came across this and in around 30 mins of following your advice I have gone from 254.2 words per minute to 557.6. What an incredible skill, I can’t wait to practice more. I feel like I have just been given such a gift. Thank you x

Miles
Miles
7 years ago

Okay so maybe I need to read this again but it seems like at every step he says not to focus on comprehension. If you’re only seeing words at 1,000 WPM you’re not reading. Where does the comprehension come in?

midnight
midnight
7 years ago

In the beginning, when I was determining my wpm, I got 144 wpm….Being a political science student in her final year, I suffered tremendously and still do because of how slow I read. I’m going to try this technique from now on. Let’s hope it works!!!

mikeenikee
mikeenikee
7 years ago

I found no change in mine unfortunately, staying at 220 wpm 🙁

Fabio Guglielmelli
Fabio Guglielmelli
7 years ago

One thing is not clear to me. If the exercise takes 20 mins why in the description of the PX project it says that is a 3 hours experiment?…. “The PX Project, a single three-hour cognitive experiment…”

TopCat
TopCat
7 years ago

That’s great but there much of the research, that showed that reading with UNDERSTANDING more than 500 words per min isn’t possible. There some documents that describe it

“The Psychology of Reading and Language Comprehension”. You can read as fast as you like. But you will not able to process data fast enough – and then reading is usless. More here “Eye movements in reading and information processing: Keith Rayner’s 40 year legacy” . So 386% is … like … no true.

gaetan
gaetan
7 years ago

Salut et merci pour les conseils. Effectivement, cela permet de gagner en temps de lecture et donc d’être plus efficient.

fred faytinger
fred faytinger
7 years ago

Thx for the tips…I’m gonna try to improve my speed. I read a tremendous amount of books but my reading speed is way too slow. I have a rather lofty I.Q. but it certainly hasn’t helped my reading skills…

unive Obsava
unive Obsava
7 years ago

Please do not read the bible this way. Read one word at a time, obsessing over it, also read between the lines and on the margin. The whole book is full of hidden meaning coded in by a supra intelligent being… other material?… zip along at the speed of light. If we can take the whole page in with one glance, the better.

Chea
Chea
7 years ago

Wowzers! I started with a total of 140 wpm, and yes I know how incredibly slow that is. But hay, I now read at a pace of 460 wpm; which I know isn’t as impressive as these other guys or ladies going at 800 wpm or more, if thats even true. I can’t argue with progress though.

After I get use to my new pace of reading I’m plaining on doing this exercise again to raise my speed another 300% or more.

Jaydeep Panchal
Jaydeep Panchal
7 years ago

Unbelievable! My speed went up from 228wpm to 744wpm! Thats 320%, or 3x faster. And I surprisingly comprehended the idea or context, if not necessarily the names. Thanks Tim. This will make book reading less exhausting, and much more intuitive about the message the author is conveying. Thank you, Tim! 😀

Lwin Moe
Lwin Moe
7 years ago

If you want to help me, can you give me a training book for fast reading.

gaurav
gaurav
7 years ago

This article actually clearly explains the step for fast reading

Muralik
Muralik
7 years ago

I’m having a question

Whether we should read a single chapter five times?

Whether comprehension will improve

Rocco
Rocco
7 years ago

Awesome article. But only 10-15 minutes of drills from a 3 hour seminar. My wuestion is where to go from here? Extend 3 minutes to 6 maybe? Or instead of 2 lines/second move on to 3 or 4 per second?

Keval Mehta
Keval Mehta
7 years ago

my speed is of 140 wpm which is increased to 217 wpm in 20 minutes. I m happy with that but I couldnt increased to 300 percent as u claimed, my improvement was 55 percent increase in 20 minutes. so is this okay? I have to practice every day this?

Jacob Robinson
Jacob Robinson
7 years ago

Just used this method as described by Tim, helped me go from 300wpm to over 600wpm in just 10 minutes! Plus it is still enjoyable to read and I don’t feel like I am just skimming through the book.

a real person
a real person
6 years ago

THIS ACTUALLY WORKS. Sure these are just some tips, but they are amazing. I was originally 167 wpm. Now I’m 737 wpm. 😀 So glad, now I can actually feel good about reading a book. \(^-^)/

Rishav Sarkar
Rishav Sarkar
6 years ago
Reply to  a real person

How??? And for how long did you practice? I ask cos I have to write a competitive exam day after……I am good at everything except reading fast and that’s bad considering I have to solve 200 questions in 2 hours……

Rishav Sarkar
Rishav Sarkar
6 years ago

I started with a wpm rate of 160 (am I retarded?). After this exercise, my wpm fluctuated between 180 – 220 – 240, while I read different articles. I still think that I am retarded.

Lalith
Lalith
6 years ago

this works!

Thanks tim.blog

ellocomarko
ellocomarko
6 years ago

A clarification – you say you need to read at 3x your target reading speed, so if targeting 900, train at 1800… that’s 2x. Which is it?

Pascal
Pascal
6 years ago
Reply to  ellocomarko

I had the same question. But just started anyway. More than doubled my speed…

hssmn
hssmn
6 years ago

New research says approximately we can boost our writing by 300% by following some steps like:

Read in the morning approximately 30 pages everyday fot building vocabulary

make your environment reading friendly

coffee helps boosting your metabolism which helps freshness of your mind etc

you can also read explanation about this research here is the link goo.gl/hDsBLz

if you want guys hope this is gonna help you as this helped me too thats why i am sharing 🙂

Anamika
Anamika
6 years ago

I did not get the technique. Are you telling to read the first part of the sentence from the beginning and the second part of the sentence from the end simultaneously and then combine them??

Shane Bell
Shane Bell
6 years ago

Holy Shit… from 176 wpm to 374!!!

Tom
Tom
6 years ago

Using an online reading test to determine baseline speed and comprehension, I went from 213 at 100% to 300wpm at 100%

Santosh K
Santosh K
6 years ago

Great stuff thankyou. Are there any tools/apps for learning speed reading.

Suganthi Manickam
Suganthi Manickam
6 years ago

Tim, what is your thought about photoReading? I paid like $400.00 few years back and bought it to use for nursing school, which I never ended up using. I came to know, once you learn a particular style of speed reading, it is hard to switch to another one. Kindly let me know. Thank you.

Tejas
Tejas
6 years ago

Wht does ths mean????

“Begin 1 word in from the first word of each line ,and end 1 word in from the last word”

Whts ths 1 word in….wht exactly we hav to do…i m not getting it

Michael Fofo Badohu
Michael Fofo Badohu
6 years ago

Thank you soo much for this stuff hope it will work for me

Vaughn Miller
Vaughn Miller
6 years ago

Hi hi,

Maybe I’m being silly but what’s next after these four steps?

AnthonyBryan Selosa
AnthonyBryan Selosa
6 years ago

Wow!! from 92wpm to 980wpm. Very effective!!!

Tanya Gold
Tanya Gold
6 years ago

I am reading your book the 4 hour work week. I love the tip on accomplishing more in less time. Curious how long it took you to write this book and how you carved out the time ie 2 hours every morning for 6 wks ?

Pascal
Pascal
6 years ago

from 206 to 495…

That is awesome!

And way easier than I thought!

Using the same practice can increase this?

Robel
Robel
6 years ago
Reply to  Pascal

Hi Pascal,

I was curious how you understood the “Begin 1 word in from the first word of each line” , when he says begin, do you actually leave and NOT read the boundary words, or it’s only that you don’t look at them but use your peripheral view to read them? Because if you skip one word on each side, you won’t understand the text.

Sam Catania
Sam Catania
6 years ago

I didn’t feel like this was working at all while I did it, but I went from 180 to 522 wpm, and actually understood stuff at 522. This is lifesaving for me. If you don’t feel like it’s working, it is. Wait until you see the new # afterwards!