These are four stories about completely different people. They are connected by an interesting plot and vivid emotions. The first story tells about a wife who is capable of much in order to find her mean ex-husband and take revenge on him. This is an interesting and vibrant noir style story. The next chapter is much more melancholic and the events are developing slowly. The main character returns to her hometown after many years. She is ill and hopes to make peace with the last dear person who survived. The third story is a funny and unusual look at the life of Henry the Eighth. And the book ends with a fantastic tale about vanity and humility. After reading this book the reader can understand how completely different stories can perfectly harmonize and complement each other.
Text Analysis: Unique words: 1075 Total
words: 4603
Hard words: sounded, drifted, fumbled, consumed, guarding, shifted, divorcing, hector, parents, slammed, depthless, summoning, perspiring, piqued, quickened, foulness, unshed, answered, passed, reaching, appreciated, clinking, undone, carried, worst, squeezed, slanderous, exchanged, produced, lord
Bringing words alive through reading and exploring at an early age. The books shared are designed to build strength, courage, determination, independence and a…
·
Similar ideas popular now
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Mob Hit: By Dr. Seuss. This book is designed with words that rhyme. Not only does it rhyme but it build attention span learning style.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
My Five Senses: This book is designed to teach preschoolers to experience the word through their eyes, ears, nose, hands, and tongue. It explains the 5 senses concept of growth and development.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
The Cat in the Hat: This story is designed to make the words come alive through video. Children can not only hear the words but see characters appear in life like form. This builds imagination and curiosity.
The Lion King Magical Story: Reading this book share the adventures of childhood and enjoying being a child. Explore and Learn!
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
The Lion King Simba’s Pride: This video is shared to allow children how to observe the trouble one may get in if they do not follow directions and obey. Seeing the movie give a visual view of what is being taught.
The Three Little Pigs: This book is about learning to respect the opinion of other individuals as well as your own. The strategy for this book is to show that its okay to be different and build courage in making decisions.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
The Boy Who Cried Wolf: This story teaches children the important of being truthful and honest. The story also displays that if a person is dishonest, when there is a need for someone to believe in you, it is not always accepted because of past actions showed.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
Dumbo the Flying Elephant: This book is designed to help the reader develop strength and determination. It demonstrates that we may be different or look different, there is still something we still have a purpose.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
The Little Red Hen: This book encourage children to have strength to do things on his/her own. It teaches that help may not always be available and individuals must make decision independently. The moral in the story is to never quit.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
See Spot Run! This book is designed to help children read with repeated words for word recognition and word identification when seen in a different place. It build a mental storage of words.
The Power of Reading: One Word At A Time «Peaches» Floyce Thomas
The universal reason people give for not reading is that they don’t have time. Since most people read around 200 words per minute (wpm), about as quickly as they speak, most people can take a week or two to finish one book. If you’re only finishing a book every few weeks, it hardly seems like a good use of time.
Luckily, anyone can learn to read a book every day. If you could read 5 times faster, you could theoretically get through 5 times as many books. You could learn new things much quicker, be more cultured, get through the news quicker in the morning, and more.
The problem with normal speed reading is that it can be very hard to apply above certain speeds. You have to turn pages, or wait for them to shift on your e-reader, and moving your eyes around the page slows you down. But there’s an excellent solution that I use to get through a new book every day or two.
Step One: Learn to Speed Read
First you need to start training yourself to speed read. The easiest way is to simply start using Spreeder to practice (I’m not affiliated with them in any way). They have a few articles on how to speed read most effectively, but it can be distilled to these main points:
- Don’t speak the words as you read them. You can read faster than you can speak, so mouthing each word as you go slows you down.
- Don’t try to read each word in your head, but rather create a mental picture of the overarching message being conveyed. Your mind also has a speed limit for speaking individual words.
- Keep your eyes fixed on the center of the page and read from your peripheral vision. Be sure that you’re far enough from your screen for this to work.
- You don’t remember everything perfectly when you read slowly, so don’t expect to remember everything perfectly when you speed read.
When you use Spreeder, start the application at 250 wpm. That’s a little above the 200 wpm rate that most people read at. As soon as you feel comfortable, add another 50-100 wpm. Keep going up in increments until you hit a ceiling that’s hard to get through–after a couple hours of practice I was able to hit 1,000 wpm.
⌄ Scroll down to continue reading article ⌄
⌄ Scroll down to continue reading article ⌄
The important thing is to not only increase your wpm, but also your chunk size. This means reading 2, 3, or 4 words at a time instead of just 1. Trying to read just one word at a time at 1,000 wpm is very difficult, but when there are 3 words it’s not so bad. You’ll learn to absorb blocks of text at a time instead of specific words. When you can get to 4 or 5 word chunks, you’ll be able to read most book pages in 2 or 3 chunks, which means you have to move your eyes significantly less than if you were reading each word individually.
Step Two: Find Reading Materials
To use Spreeder, you need plain text that you can copy in to the application. This is can be kind of tricky. Amazon has heavy digital rights management (DRM) on their books, as does Barnes and Noble, so you can’t simple open the file up in Notepad and copy the text. There are a ton of free books online that are out of copyright (meaning they were published before 1942), and there are also places you can buy books in formats that are easily convertible to text (such as PDFs).
However you get the texts converted to plain text, make sure you are doing so legally. Piracy is illegal, and unfair to the author who spent his time and energy creating the book.
Step Three: Create the Environment
Once you’ve taught yourself to speed read at a decent pace, and have some books you want to work through without Spreeder, you need an ideal reading environment. Speed reading at high paces is mentally taxing and after an hour you’ll likely find yourself tired. In addition, since it requires perfect attention and focus, any distraction (including music) can mess you up. You need as little sensory stimulation in your environment as possible.
Here are some additional tips to creating the perfect speed reading environment:
- Set aside at least an hour to read, and only to read. Don’t let other distractions interrupt.
- Get noise canceling headphones or go to a quiet place. Playing white noise through headphones can help as well.
- Make sure you have the screen at an optimal distance. Tablets are great for this because you can hold them right where you want them.
- Have a way to take notes! When you burn through a book in an hour, you’ll naturally forget things. Taking notes along the way is very helpful
If you take the time to practice, and make yourself go slightly faster each time, you’ll quickly become a reading machine. You’ll be amazed at how quickly you can learn new things, and absorb concepts that would have taken days or weeks before. At the same time, sit back and read in your normal fashion from time to time as well! Speed reading is mentally taxing, so if you want to read to relax you shouldn’t feel pressured to speed through it.
⌄ Scroll down to continue reading article ⌄
⌄ Scroll down to continue reading article ⌄
Featured photo credit: Books by Algiamil via SXC.hu
Researchers are trialing technology to allow you to read up to 800 words a minute by flashing one word at a time in quick succession.
Tech startup Spritz is experimenting with the technique that aims to boost reading speed by eliminating the time it takes to move your eyes between words.
The company is partnering with the BBC on a project to test the concept on its readers in the hope it will make news consumption on phones easier.
the technology by tech firm Spritz is being tested on readers by the BBC and could allow people to scan through news at up to 800 words a minute
‘UK adults now spend more time online and consuming media each day than they do sleeping,’ the BBC’s Cyrus Saihan said.
‘We wanted to see what new technologies could be applied to make this overload of information easier for our audiences to manage.
‘The technology that we have used in our experiment works on the theory that, by showing you only one word at a time, your eyes can stay in a fixed position and so don’t have to be constantly moving whilst you read.
‘As a result, the rate at which you can read can be dramatically increased.’
The BBC wrote in its blog that moving your eyes across a block of text takes up 80 per cent of the time spent reading.
The technology puts one of the central letters of a word in red so you can focus your eyes on that one point and not move them.
The technology was designed as people increasingly consume news on their phones and watches, which have less room for text
The average person reads about 200 words a minute, but the broadcaster set up videos that allow readers to try 300, 400, and 800 words a minute.
Mr Saihan said reading one word at a time took some getting used to, but he and his colleagues found it ‘relatively easy’ after a few minutes.
He said the technology could become crucial in the future when augmented reality put floating text in the air all around us.
‘Reading large blocks of text in mid-air might not be possible. Perhaps speed reading text floating in the air, one word at a time, might become something that the children of the future consider to be the norm,’ he said.
Smart watches that have very little room for text could also be able to easily broadcast news to users one word at a time.
However, Coventry University cognitive psychologist Cyriel Diels warned the brain might not be able to keep up and eyes could become strained.
The technology puts one of the central letters of a word in red so you can focus your eyes on that one point and not move them, saving on time spent moving eyes across text
‘A big difference with normal self-paced reading is that this system-paced reading requires continuous focus and attention on the display to be able to understand any text,’ he told the Telegraph.
‘People’s ability to follow the text will be different for different people, some may be able to follow it at high speeds whereas others won’t.’
Dr Diels said if readers lost their focus at all they would miss words and not be able to make sense of the sentence, and couldn’t come back to it.
But he called the technology ‘impressive’ and said it could be useful in some circumstances, without supplanting traditional reading.