Also, I'm interested in your ideas of what a reasonable maximum average speed is for stuff that matters. Not like a newspaper, but say, something about this complex. This isn't Ulysses, but certainly if you compare it to most write ups it has more logical substance to take on, more explication than summarization. The above websites suggest it is possible to comprehend at rates over 1000 wpm. I'm almost certain that's impossible, but could you see someone getting 90%+ comprehension at 500 wpm?
How quickly do you read?
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Hippopotamus
1914 Posts
Also, I'm interested in your ideas of what a reasonable maximum average speed is for stuff that matters. Not like a newspaper, but say, something about this complex. This isn't Ulysses, but certainly if you compare it to most write ups it has more logical substance to take on, more explication than summarization. The above websites suggest it is possible to comprehend at rates over 1000 wpm. I'm almost certain that's impossible, but could you see someone getting 90%+ comprehension at 500 wpm? | ||
mikeymoo
Canada7170 Posts
I'll take the test in a bit and see if things have changed since then. | ||
motbob
United States12546 Posts
Reading speed and comprehension are the skills that will get you furthest in life. | ||
yB.TeH
Germany413 Posts
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Binky1842
United States2599 Posts
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b3h47pte
United States1317 Posts
wow lmfao. | ||
Klockan3
Sweden2866 Posts
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bluemanrocks
United States304 Posts
what can i say. im a speed demon. and by that i mean that i just guessed on all the questions. | ||
Hippopotamus
1914 Posts
On January 06 2009 10:34 Klockan3 wrote: The questions were silly and rewards just glancing over the text. That is just something to promote their program, since most who reads faster really do lose reading comprehension it is just that this test is specifically tailored so that you don't lose any score since it only asks very general questions about the text. Well, I wouldn't quite say that. I don't know how it's like over there in Sweden, but as somebody who has actually been through the American education system I can tell you that this is fairly standard in American high schools (and in intro classes at shitty colleges). You could say more-or-less the same about the difficulty of the SAT, which decides admission to American colleges. | ||
Koiru
United States116 Posts
You scored 40% of the questions correct. | ||
Raithed
China7078 Posts
On January 06 2009 10:56 Koiru wrote: Your average reading speed over this passage was 28710 words per minute. You scored 40% of the questions correct. LOL mine is like 50% with that number. | ||
naonao
United States847 Posts
You scored 70% of the questions correct. Not too bad if I do say so myself. | ||
Disregard
China10252 Posts
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IzzyCraft
United States4487 Posts
90% retention lol although it's kinda messed because i already knew some of that. | ||
Hippopotamus
1914 Posts
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meegrean
Thailand7699 Posts
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Yogurt
United States4258 Posts
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Divinek
Canada4045 Posts
On January 06 2009 10:20 Qeet wrote: didnt look at the test, but i think its possible to comprehend 1000wpm, if the sentences are common and you read all day long. the people capable of doing this are reconstructing whole passages of text in their minds like normal people do with letters to words (you dont look at single letters but whole words) It certainly is and you're pretty much wrong. I read around 1150 wpm~ on average with 100% recall, and most of it has to do with using peripheral vision. Has nothing to do with the sentences being common or reading alot though. | ||
qrs
United States3637 Posts
As for the speed, of course I read/skimmed it as fast as I could, certainly not at my normal reading pace. Didn't everyone? | ||
qrs
United States3637 Posts
On January 06 2009 10:05 Hippopotamus wrote: Also, I'm interested in your ideas of what a reasonable maximum average speed is for stuff that matters. Not like a newspaper, but say, something about this complex. This isn't Ulysses, but certainly if you compare it to most write ups it has more logical substance to take on, more explication than summarization. The above websites suggest it is possible to comprehend at rates over 1000 wpm. I'm almost certain that's impossible, but could you see someone getting 90%+ comprehension at 500 wpm? I think that there are two separate things involved here. One is reading at a level that allows you to see and remember the things that you read. Another understanding something that may require some thought to assimilate. In your example encyclopedia article, it may well be that some extra thinking time is required to understand what you are reading. It may also be that without spending those extra minutes, your retention will suffer because you don't understand it as well, but this doesn't mean that the extra time should be reckoned as part of the cost of reading. IMO, the paradigmatic test of reading speed should be anything where the details are important (i.e. it can't be skimmed without losing something) but where no thinking is required to actually understand those details. It's hard to entirely separate the two though. | ||
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