“A good reader will be able to use a range of approaches to reading, and will possess a variety of helpful reading skills. Perhaps even more importantly, a good reader will be able to make sensible decisions about what reading will be worthwhile.”
Gavin Fairburn & Susan Fairburn, Reading at University
The sheer quantity of literature that you will need to engage with at university means that you will need to develop skills and knowledge to make you a more effective reader. This page considers the best times to read, how to read selectively and introduces a systematic reading technique.
Most people tend to remember the information that they have taken in at the beginning and at then end of sessions:
It is therefore a good strategy to create more beginnings and endings by having regular breaks, say after each half hour:
Before you set off again, you can quickly review what you read earlier and this too will help with retention, although it is what you understand from your reading that really counts.
Don't leave academic reading for times when you're tired - you will need to concentrate.
Plan reading times into your day.
Read every day if you can (even for half an hour) - not just when you have to for an assignment.
Have regular breaks when reading.
Make notes to keep your mind focused.
Effective reading needs to be active. In an academic context the purpose of your reading will probably be to develop your thoughts and to add new information to that which you already have—to see links between the old and the new. By consciously thinking as you read, you will be learning, which involves changing your ideas, seeing them from new angles and combining them in new ways.
Read with a pen or highlighter in your hand. Keep asking yourself: “What is the main idea the writer is trying to get across here?” then highlight or note just the key words and phrases (naturally not in a library book).
Some people find it helpful to create images like drawing mind maps of the main ideas to help see how ideas are associated with one another.
Others benefit from reading important sections aloud and recording them to listen to again later.
As you read, try guessing what is coming up and what the conclusions will be.
One systematic way of reading is using the SQ3R method:
Try out the SQ3R technique for yourself. Start with a fairly short text. It might be interesting to work with a friend and compare (a) your questions, which will probably differ and (b) your thoughts on the technique.