Grammar Minute

A common tip for speed reading is suppressing your internal narrator. Learn why this might work for you on today's episode of Grammar Minute!

What is Grammar Minute?

Saving the English language 60 seconds at a time.

Welcome to the Grammar Minute, where we're saving the English language sixty seconds at a time! I'm Lauren Smyth, and recently I was asked for tips on speed reading. For the record, I can speed read. At my maximum speed, I can read 1 to 2 hundred pages an hour, about 1000 words per minute, depending on how complex the topic is, and I can retain the information.

The key to this as best I can tell is turning off your internal narrator. Many people hear a voice inside their head as they read, which limits them to reading internally at about the same speed they would read aloud. Being able to read truly silently is a different skill than being able to read inside your head. Turning off that internal narrator involves seeing words as shapes rather than sounds. So basically you run your eyes across a sentence and determine from the contour of the letters the content of that sentence. Then, you run it through a little process in your brain that summarizes the sentence and turns it into a picture or a combined thought rather than a sentence with sound or rhythm. Basically, the key to speed reading is seeing a page as a whole picture and painting a visual summary in your head as you go.

I know that's very esoteric and hard to grasp. Truly, the key to speed reading is reading a lot and getting so familiar with English that you don't need to read a word aloud for it to make sense.

That's your Grammar Minute! Visit thegrammarminute.com for more tips and tricks.