That happens to me a lot but I got the hang of it. When you are going to read a book just try to get in the story try not to look around and clear your mind and imagine what you are reading this work for me I read Twilight by Stephenie Meyer in 3 days and its 500 pages long. At first I didn't think I can do it but if you clear your mind and just see the texture in your mind then its all good.
2007-01-16 15:33:24
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answer #1
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answered by Judas Rabbi's daughter. 2
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Wow. I have the same problem with watching tv. Drives me batty. I sometimes watch the same show over and over again and still have no clue as to what is going on. On the other hand I enjoy reading. I read three books (or five if they are light reading.) at a time. This way, if my interest is waining with one story, I put it down and pick up the other. No, it doesn't get confusing, nor do I forget what I've read previously. I don't think dyslexia has anything to do with it (I don't have it), but who knows. I don't read all that much anymore anyway. Since Jan 1 I think I've finished about 12 books (300 or more pages) which is far behind my monthly average. And yes I do have a full time job, a family and am getting enough sleep.
It might be something as simple as the fact that you are not interested in the subject matter. Look at your interests and find a book on them and see.
2007-01-16 15:36:55
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answer #2
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answered by speranzacampbell 5
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Those are all of the identical query... To me, the major facet of a booklet is the plot, adopted carefully by way of the subplots. These need to be exciting separately, and need to additionally combine in combination in an exciting and common approach whilst contributing to one another. Next up is writing type. Too so much element and I uncover myself studying phrases. Too little element and the tale turns into bland and complicated. Neither will preserve me studying. The factor of view a tale is informed from could also be fundamental. The quantity of principal characters can particularly give a contribution to a singular. If there don't seem to be sufficient to exhibit the whole tale and all of the man or woman progress, I'll uncover it disagreeable. If there are too many, I'll most probably uncover the tale uninteresting and consider the booklet is filled with distractions, notably if a few of the ones characters do not look to give a contribution whatever to the relevant plot. Then comes man or woman progress. This is an absolute necessity of any tale. I pick reports with characters that do not begin from scratch. The commencing facets from which the characters increase are principal, and having an overly vulnerable one does not inspire me to learn a singular. How the characters increase (progressively or all of a sudden) could also be fundamental. Typically, progressively is higher. However, there are occasions whilst all of a sudden is extra right. And, of path, establishing the atmosphere issues too. What is the regional panorama like? What are the regional customs? Too so much in this can without doubt be disagreeable, however too little can depart a tale empty and missing extensive. Sentence constitution could also be fundamental, together with wording. Reading "mentioned" twenty instances on a web page isn't satisfying. Neither is seeing misuse of "so much much less" or "certainly not brain" or different different an identical matters. And well use of punctuation may be very fundamental. So there are the fundamentals. There are such a lot of matters that give a contribution as to if I revel in a booklet, however the ones are the major.
2016-09-07 21:34:13
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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There's no easy answer to this one. We all have diffferent ways of processing information, and therefore the best approach to reading can differ from person to person. If you truly think you have a problem with a learning disability, then you should talk to a doctor or educator about being tested. There are ways to spot difficulties like this and fix them.
Learning disabilities aside, if your biggest problem is that your mind wanders off topic, then try to read something that is more interesting to you. Obviously you can't do this if you're talking about a class assignment. However, if you practice on your own and read books that ARE interesting to you, it will strengthen your mind's ability to process what you read. Then you will actually find your "assigned" books easier to approach.
This idea of reading easier things to strengthen your mind actually follows the same basic concept as a physical workout. After all, you wouldn't try to run five miles when you're out of shape, right? First, you would run shorter distances and do other kinds of exercises. After doing that, you will find the five-mile run much easier to do. Do the same thing with reading. Start small, at a level that is comfortable for you, and work up from there. There is no shame in reading a book meant for a younger age group. After all, I often like to read easier novels like Peter Pan, The Jungle Book, Treasure Island or anything by Roald Dahl. Who cares if they're easier? They're still great stories!
Also, consider when you are reading. Studies have shown that we are sharpest at the beginning of the day, when our brain is well rested. If you are only reading in the time before you go to sleep at night, you will have a harder time concentrating.
Here is a link from the University of Alabama with some other general reading comprehension advice:
http://www.ctl.ua.edu/CTLStudyAids/StudySkillsFlyers/Reading/improvereadingskills.htm
Remember, reading should not be a stressful experience. Take your time and start slow. With work, it will get easier!
2007-01-16 15:43:16
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't usually have a hard time reading, but if I'm not interested in it, like if it's for school, I tend to let my mind wander. To make it easier to read, I'd say try reading aloud to yourself. This way you have to concentrate a little more than if you're just reading in your mind when you can wander. Also, try to find a place that doesn't have many distractions. Probably a place without a TV or music. I can't read if there's noise, unless it's instrumental music. Try to find a place where there's nothing to distract you and it should work better. Hope this helps.
2007-01-17 04:23:02
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answer #5
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answered by Kristie 3
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I have a friend with dyslexia and she uses a bookmark or folded piece of paper. She lines it up with the sentence she's reading and slowly moves it down the page as she finishes each line.
She says that this allows her to concentrate on only the text she needs to read, so her attention doesn't go all over the page and from there, all over the room.
Some other ideas: read out loud to yourself or have a friend or your computer read to you.
Good luck!
2007-01-16 18:47:32
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answer #6
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answered by kjcedits 3
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i have a hard time with reading myself. sometimes when I try to read it's like looking at a sea of black and I just don't have the patience to concentrate on getting it to make sense.
i've found that the best way for me to sit down and read is to find a book that i have enough interest in to read. in general i read ya fiction (mostly sci-fi and fantasy) and even though a lot of people give me grief about it, i figure the hell with them at least i'm reading.
sometimes it also helps if you get a book with larger print because it's easier to seperate the words out. anyway hope that helps.
2007-01-16 15:13:32
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answer #7
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answered by Mutly 5
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As for me, I need a good, quiet place and a pencil to mark those great words, phrases, paragraphs, etc. which generally include my ideas/reactions/doubts on some pages. Another tactic is I read about 2-3 books in rotation, reading only one is boring to me.
2007-01-16 15:37:29
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answer #8
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answered by Arigato ne 5
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You need to find a book that interests you.
Just read the first line if that doesn't grab your attention, don't get it.
After reading books that interest you, you'll get into it and you'll be able to read almost anything.
2007-01-16 20:04:40
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answer #9
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answered by ghds 4
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