Everyone doesn’t read this way but some people do. I do. It’s a form of speed reading. You don’t need to read all words in a sentence/paragraph/page to fully comprehend. Some people learn that quickly and are able to speed read.
Sometimes when I’m reading aloud to my classroom and I’m interested in the story, the kids catch me skipping over words and sometimes even replacing words. Words that aren’t important to comprehend and understand the text.
Everyone doesn’t read this way but some people do. I do. It’s a form of speed reading. You don’t need to read all words in a sentence/paragraph/page to fully comprehend. Some people learn that quickly and are able to speed read.
Sometimes when I’m reading aloud to my classroom and I’m interested in the story, the kids catch me skipping over words and sometimes even replacing words. Words that aren’t important to comprehend and understand the text.
Everyone doesn’t read this way but some people do. I do. It’s a form of speed reading. You don’t need to read all words in a sentence/paragraph/page to fully comprehend. Some people learn that quickly and are able to speed read.
Sometimes when I’m reading aloud to my classroom and I’m interested in the story, the kids catch me skipping over words and sometimes even replacing words. Words that aren’t important to comprehend and understand the text.
Not just “the.” It’s a matter of expectations. Having spent a lot of time editing, I am more sensitive to such things, and get annoyed at the number of mistakes that slip through in printed texts. But if you’re not an editor of proof-reader, you are probably reading just for meaning, not with as tuned an eye for such things. That’s why.
Not just “the.” It’s a matter of expectations. Having spent a lot of time editing, I am more sensitive to such things, and get annoyed at the number of mistakes that slip through in printed texts. But if you’re not an editor of proof-reader, you are probably reading just for meaning, not with as tuned an eye for such things. That’s why.
a huge part of what you perceive of the world around you isn’t actually what’s happening, it’s what you expect to be happening. there’s way too much information for you to process everything going on around you all the time so you actually just pull in part of the information, then make up the rest based on previous experiences. equally, your memories aren’t of what happened, they’re of what you thought happened.
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