|
|
|
|
|
by arbitrage
1465 days ago
|
|
One thing that helps me when my reading ability wavers from time to time is to use ereader apps with auto-scroll functionality. This used to be much more common around the 2000 era, but has mostly died out because eInk doesn't handle it well at all. I have a lot of learning challenges. I was taught how to read wrong. The list goes on. I sorta forced my brain to learn bounded-box read-ahead/behind scanning by turning on autoscroll and letting it rip. My brain parts figured out the trick. Eventually, I was able to strengthen my reading skills to the point that I can self-regulate my eye-scanning & page-perusing movements on my own. From time to time, when I'm having a not-read-good day, I still use an autoscroll app to help me retain focus. There are a lot of chunking applets and extensions for the web browser, too. Those helped immensely to teach my brain how to read better. Eventually, I figured out how to do multi-line chunking/processing that way. It took me much longer to learn all the various skills that usually get lumped together under the term "speed reading" than I expected. It took years to fix my reading skills. I wanted it to take weeks. It also took so much more practice than I expected. |
|
If anyone has advice, I am desperately in need.