Sunday, September 27, 2015

Speed Reading App

I'm considering making a speed reading app with react native. What features would you like to see?

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

End of this blog

This blog was for a class, and I will no longer be blogging here. I'm currently obsessed with researching free online learning environments (wikiversity, wikieducator, etc.). If I start a new blog on this subject, I'll post a link to it here.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Mind Mapping

Years ago, Tony Buzan took the time to study the notes of notable minds (DaVinci for example), and came up with a system of note-taking that is highly effective. It's called mind mapping, and is a very simple concept that mirrors the connection building process of your brain.

Watch this youtube clip on Tony Buzan explaining and illustrating mind mapping: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlabrWv25qQ

I use comapping.com as a virtual mind mapping tool that is also very useful for collaboration, but many people use freemind (http://freemind.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page).

Try mind mapping out and let me know what you think.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Speed Reading Game! (coming soon)

There is a lot of material on speed reading, and if you want to become an effective speed reader, you are going to need to practice. Too many people get lost along the path of learning how to read faster, and more give up after only a few practice sessions. Thus, I have decided to design an educational game devoted to increasing your reading speed. I will give you more details soon and ask for help brainstorming ideas to make the game addicting. Think how cool it would be to have access to an enjoyable game that made you read faster!

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Recommended Resources

Here's a list of recommended resources, which will be updated frequently:

Hardware:
  • Kindle ($260): The best device to read ebooks on, period.
  • Timer ($10): A nifty little gadget for timing your reading/break sessions
Software:
  • The Reader's Edge ($80 for Basic): The top rated, desktop speed reading software
  • Ababasoft: A bunch of unpolished, speed read training applications (and articles)
  • Spreeder: One of the best ways to practice speed reading on e-content (ebooks, email, online news, etc.)
  • Comapping (Less than $3 a month): Online application for creating and sharing mind maps
  • Freemind: Desktop software for making killer mind maps
  • Lumosity: A site exploding with addicting brain training games
  • Free Reading Test: Evaluate your effective reading speed here
  • Quickreader (iPhone): Best iPhone speed reading application thus far
Books:
  • Speed-Reading for Professionals by Wechsler and Bell ($3 used): A very practical book filled with techniques and exercises devoted to dramatically increasing your reading speed and retention.
  • The Mind Map Book ($7 used): This book will introduce yourself to mind-mapping, a revolutionary way to take notes, brainstorm, and organize your thoughts.
Articles:
Services:
  • Project Gutenberg: Project Gutenberg provides the world with free access to thousands of books, most of which are in the public domain. Go nuts downloading ebooks from this site.

Review It or Lose It

Think about the classes you took in high school, how well do you remember any of the information you learned in them? Most likely you have lost much of the knowledge you temporarily owned, forcing you to take essentially the same class years later in college. Imagine how far ahead you would be if you had kept all of that knowledge securely locked in your brain? Review it, regularly, or lose it.

Hooking
You have been amassing experiences your entire life, transforming them into pieces of knowledge, and then cementing these pieces together to build a knowledge base. When you read, you pick up pieces of knowledge and store them in your short-term memory. In order for these pieces to transition into your long-term knowledge base, you need to build durable connections between these new pieces of knowledge and the knowledge structures you have already built. Think about how the new knowledge relates to your existing knowledge, how they are similar or different. This technique is called "hooking" and is something you should be doing throughout the entire reading process, but most importantly in the review stage.

Transforming Your Knowledge Base Into a Castle
A useful hooking technique is to visualize your memory and knowledge base as a castle, where each object within the castle is a piece of knowledge. When you want to add a piece of knowledge to your knowledge base, just pick a symbolic structure that you will remember and visualize adding it to a spot in your castle.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Schedule Breaks

Your brain is an amazing machine. It holds a gigantic database of the information gathered by your senses, interprets meaning from this information, and then constructs complex neural networks from this meaning. It is the most valuable piece of hardware in our body, but in order for it to fire on all cylinders, it needs to be constantly supplied with large amounts of oxygen and nutrients.

The burden of this crucial refueling task resides upon your circulatory system (your nutrient enriching, blood pumping system). You need this system to stay running at its peek performance level if you want to process information at your optimal rate. Maintaining a high blood flow rate is key to keeping the brain in ample supply of everything it needs. This is the primary reason you should take breaks while reading.

Here's how you are going to break:
  1. When the timer beeps on you, finish the thought you were digesting and stand up.
  2. Drink water, it is crucial for too many bodily operations to be neglected.
  3. Do some sort of exercise to get your blood flowing. You could stretch, walk around, tense your entire body, do push ups, you get the picture.
  4. After the alloted break time has expired, remember to clear your mind and to consciously refocus on your purpose.
You should experiment with times, but start with 30 minute reading sessions split by 5 minute breaks.

Another benefit of scheduling breaks is that they provide a powerful cue for your brain to switch between productive mode to recovery mode. When the 30 minute timer starts, your brain will know that it needs to be in 100% productive mode for 30 minutes, then it can switch to 100% recovery mode for 5.