The 5 Minute Learning Machine
The 5 Minute Learning Machine
Contents
Part One
THE SIMPLE STRAEGY OF POWER LEARNING
CHAPTER
1. How Good Are Your Study Habits Today?
Take This Three Minute Test p.8
2. Our Plan Of Attack For More Learning Power
Overnight This Is All You Have To Do!...p.10
3. Organization How To Get Twice As Much
Done In Half The Timep.14
Part Two
DIGGING OUT THE FACTS READING
4. The Shortcut Way To Word Power Right
Down To Recognizing A New Word Without
Needing A Dictionaryp.19
5. How To Become A Master Reader In Three
Easy Stepsp.33
6. How To Pre-Read A Lesson Understand it
Before You Readp.36
7. Signpost Parts Of Every Chapter, And What
Each One Tells Youp.44
8. How To Turn The Chapters Main Thoughts
Into Questions, To Automatically Pinpoint The
Information You Need About Themp.64
9. How To Power-Read Master An Assignment In Minutesp.68
10.Note Taking. How To Remember What Youve
Read And Put It To Immediate Usep.75
11.How To Get Twice As Much Out Of Your Daily
Readingp.84
12.The All-Important Art Of Listening Right
Down To Reading The Speakers Thoughtsp.94
Part Three
EXPRESSING THE FACTS WRITING AND CONCERSING
13.The First Essential Correct Spelling Made
Easyp.104
Part Four
MATHEMATICS CAN BE FUN, IF YOU DO IT THIS WAY
15.How Anyone Can Improve His Skill In Mathematics,
Even If He Cant Add Two And Two Todayp.117
16.The One Simple Secret Of Avoiding 20 Per Cent
Of All Math Errors Automaticallyp.121
17.How To Make Abstract Mathematical Ideas
Concretep.124
18.How To Make Complicated Problems HalfSolve Themselvesp.130
Part Five
MASTERING FACTS THE ART OF REMEMBERING AND
REVIEW
19.Errors- The Royal Road To Knowledgep.134
20.How To Burn Facts, Lessons, Whole Subjects Into
Your Mind For Goodp.142
Part Six
HOW TO BREEZE THROUGH TESTS
21.The Week Before The Test-What To Do And What
Not To Dop.156
22.Types Of Short-Answer Tests And How To Master Themp.164
23.How To Master The Essay Testp.193
24.The Simple Strategy Of Making The Test Help Youp.203
Pass It
Epilogue How To Make Yourself Into A Mental Champion
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
He earns his income from his job gains his status from his job
makes most of his friends from his job.
2) And yet from the very first day that you apply for that job you
are rated acceptable or rejectable on the basis of your ability to
absorb facts, to master skills!
For example a college master's degree is worth $1.3 million more in
lifetime earnings than a high school diploma, according to a recent
report from the Commerce Department's Census Bureau. High school
graduates can expect, on average, to earn $1.2 million; those with a
bachelor's degree, $2.1 million; and people with a master's degree, $2.5
million.
Persons with doctoral degrees earn an average of $3.4 million during
their working life, while those with professional degrees do best at $4.4
million.
3) But this is only the start of the overwhelming impact the ability to
learn will have on your career! At every rung on the ladder every
time youre considered for a promotion or a new job your ability
to learn (and your ability to prove that learning in formal tests) will
make the difference between skyrocketing up, or standing still!
Is It Really That Hard To Absorb Facts? The Answer Is No
Given average ability, men and women who have trouble learning
in adult life do so because no one had ever taught them to study
efficiently when they were children!
Without the proper study techniques, it is perfectly possible for you
to understand only HALF what you should get of a newspaper, magazine,
textbook, business letter or report! Without the proper retention
techniques, it is possible for you to remember only HALF of what you
have just read.
And without the proper techniques of filing and retaining that
information you have stored away in your brain! We doom ourselves,
through our negligence of the proper study techniques, to struggling
through life as a HALF DOER.
This is the purpose of this book. To teach you how to double your power
to learn with the least effort, in the shortest possible time.
1. They will destroy present study habits that make learning
unpleasant and burdensome, and replace them with new, simpler
and easier habits that turn study into a thrilling, soaring hour of
achievement every time you open a book.
2. In other words, they will reduce effective study procedures to the
habit level. They will make them a part of your mind, so that you
get right down to the core of every lesson, every report, every
article automatically, the instant you set your eyes on it.
3. Because of these new study habits, and sooner than you dare
expect today, your ability to learn and to perform will zoom, will
reveal such a change that your boss or friends may actually ask you
what happened.
4. Self-improvement periods-learning periods will shrink in timesometimes actually in half while the work turned out from them
will double in quantity and quality.
5. And there will be no more forcing yourself to learn. Learning will
suddenly become a privilege rather than a punishment, because
each new lesson will give you a new taste of success, a new thrill
of understanding, a stronger and stronger realization that you can
conquer knowledge and make it your own, day after day.
Isnt it worth 5 minutes of thrilling application every day while your
forging ahead?
All the equipment you need is right here. These simple rules apply to
any man or woman, with an average inborn intelligence, with any level of
previous education.
To put them to work for YOU to carve out the life of success and
achievement you want for YOURSELF you start right here.
PART ONE
CHAPTER 1
How good are your study habits today?
Take this 3 minute test
Are you living up to your full potential? Are you squeezing out the
absolute top achievement that your inborn intelligence will give you?
In other words, are your present learning habits helping or
hindering you? Is the power of your brain being harnessed from the very
first minute you open a book or blocked every step of the way?
This three-minute check list will tell you right now. It is a quick,
scientific run-down, not of your intelligence or ability, but of the results
your present learning habits are capable of giving you.
Simply observe your learning habits for a single night. Then
answer these questions with a yes or a no. In three brief minutes, every
weak spot in your learning pattern will be thrown into the spot-light.
Youll see the road-blocks in your way, and youll take your first
step toward removing them.
Here they are. Answer them coldly and honestly.
DO YOU:
Find it hard to keep your mind on what youre reading?
Have trouble picking out the main points of the book youre reading?
Forget the next day what you read the night before?
Have trouble finding books, pencils, notes, reports you want to work
with?
Take hours to get yourself going on the material you want to learn?
Spend fruitless hours trying to figure out standard problems in business
mathematics?
Make the same mistakes over and over again?
your next rating sheet on the faces of your boss and friends on the
type of people you can now hold spell - bound with your conversation
on the type of book you can now read and repeat on the new promotion
youve earned the raise youve deserved the feeling of sheer simple
satisfaction youve carved out for yourself with your own mind!
CHAPTER 2
Our plan of attack for more learning power overnight this
is all you have to do!
In the past few years, a great many people have become confused.
They have become so fascinated with social studies, physics, foreign
languages, and the like, that they have forgotten how simple a good
education really is.
A good education a bedrock education an education upon
which you will either succeed or fail for the rest of your life consists of
just simple skills:
The ability to read,
The ability to express thoughts in words, and
The ability to solve mathematical problems.
THE THREE SIMPLE BUILDING BLOCKS OF SUCCESS
Reading, writing and arithmetic. The old-timers knew it. Weve
forgotten it; and we have to get back to it.
These are the foundation stones. Everything else, all the advanced
subjects, depends on them. For example, if you cant understand what
you read, you cant read science.
If you cant solve simple problems in addition or subtraction then
you wont even be able to start on calculus or aerodynamics.
Everything you do in your business life, for example depends upon
your ability to read, to write, and to figure. For the rest of your life, youll
be reading newspapers, memos, articles, and reports.
counts; its what that computer does with the information what it feeds
back to you that counts.
Some of that information can be lost, forgotten, or distorted. You
have to ask for it again to make sure.
The same with your own mind. In everything you learn, for every
day of your life, what you read means nothing. Words can simply pour in
and out of your mind like water through a funnel.
The only thing that counts is what sticks. How much you
understand. How much you remember. And how much you can put to
immediate use.
Burn this fact into your mind. To learn any subject, mere reading is
only the first step. The complete, effective learning process is made up of
these four steps:
Reading
Understanding,
Remembering, and
Reproducing the key thoughts in your own words.
This is the end goal you want. Reproducing, putting to use,
expressing in your own words, either on paper or in conversation with
your friends. (Or, in the case of mathematics, in solving new problems.)
This is what you are aiming at, the end result. If your learning
process stops short of this goal, this effective self expression, then you are
getting only half the benefit of your work.
You have to make sure that you get it all. You have to apply these
incredibly powerful new learning techniques every single day. Heres
how you do it:
THE TEN-MINUTE ACHIEVEMENT CHECK ON THE MATERIAL
YOU LEARN FROM THIS BOOK
Starting today, and continuing for every day that you read this
book, do this:
Spend at least ten minutes a day putting these new ways of learning
to work. The time of day is unimportant; but you must be able to give that
time completely to your work, in full concentration upon these new
methods, with no interruptions and no sense of being hurried.
For these few minutes each day, nothing in the world matters but
your mind and the accomplishments it is giving you!
This will be the time you first read a magazine article in five
minutes and startle your friends that very same night by rattling off every
main point contained in it.
This will be the time you first open the door to a new field of
knowledge youve always dreamed of mastering psychology, law,
engineering, computer programming and find that you can flash
through it absorbing its facts and theories like a sponge.
Yes, this is the time when you just discover that you can put words
on paper that sing that grasp mens attention that change their minds
that make them act in the paths and directions that you want them to act!
At the beginning, you will work no more than ten minutes a day.
But then, as your skill grows greater and greater as you become more and
more confident in your own ability to learn you will want to devote
more time each day to this thrilling new opportunity for self-expression
and self-growth.
You will understand perhaps for the first time in your life the true
joy learning!
IN SUMMARY:
Your entire education rests on your mastery of three bedrock skills:
Reading,
Writing,
Mathematics.
The purpose of this book is to help you improve those skills to the point
of near perfection. This is done in two ways:
1. By teaching yourself new scientific techniques of learning how to
learn and
CHAPTER 3
Organization How to get twice as much done in half the
time
Most people waste at least half their reading and learning time,
because no one has ever shown them how to organize their work.
This is the purpose of this chapter to cut the waste out of your learning,
and make sure you get a full minutes results for every minute you spend
with your books.
WHAT IS ORGANIZATION?
Organization is simply planned direction. It is a procedure. A
system. A planned schedule of events or tasks, one after the other, that
gets something done in the shortest possible time, with the least amount
of waste.
It is doing the right thing at the right time. And not wasting your time
doing the wrong thing.
In regard to your learning growth, therefore, organization is
basically a way of sitting down at a desk, finding out what has to be done,
opening the right book to the right page., starting to do it at the beginning,
learning it step by step, knowing when it is finished and when it is right,
and then remembering what it is you have done, how you have done it,
and what use you can put it to tomorrow.
PART TWO
Digging Out The Facts Reading
CHAPTER 4
Which of these new words is the most exciting? Which carries the
thought best?
As you play on, you learn to search for exactly the right word to
project the colour and meaning of what you want to say. You feel at
home with all kinds of words small and large, simple and exotic.
You add drama and depth to everything you say or write. And you
see the difference almost immediately in the way people stop and listen to
you and you alone when you begin to speak.
Try it for a week. Promise yourself youll never use nice,
pretty, exciting. good, or other such tired words or phrases again.
Search for emotion-packed, colour-packed new words new ways
to express your thoughts your feelings your desires. This one simple
exercise alone can make a vast difference on the effect your words can
have on everyone around you, and its only the beginning.
HOW TO TEACH YOURSELF TO IDENTIFY STRANGE WORDS,
WITHOUT LOOKING THEM UP
Now you are ready to play the most thrilling and profitable game
of all learning how words are built. Recognizing the meaning of new
words without having to interrupt your reading to look them up.
This also can be made an adventure in learning, if you follow this
simple, two-step plan:
First of all, you have to realize that all words are built up, part by
part, just as a model airplane is.
Words, however, are much more simple. They have just these three basic
parts:
1. They have a root or stem, which tells us the basic meaning, such as
go.
2. Then there is the front part or prefix, which adds another meaning
to the root word, such as out plus go equals outgo.
3. And then there is the end part or suffix, which gives us still another
meaning. For example, ing, which rounds out our word to give
us out plus go plus ing to add up to outgoing.
Thus we can build one big word out of three small ones. And this
gives us a brand new word, which is much easier to remember, takes far
less space to write, and actually gives us a brand new meaning that we
wouldnt have had with the three smaller words at all.
This is the way language grows. By taking two or three small words,
and building a new word out of them. And, by doing it, giving us newmeanings to solve new problems.
There are three basic building blocks to build new words the root
and the end part.
Some words have only the root, like hearing. Still others have only the
root and a front part, unlike unheard. And still others have all three parts,
like unhearing.
Now, how does this knowledge help you recognize strange words
without looking them up? In a very simple way:
Most big words that you dont recognize are actually made up of
smaller words, in exactly the manner we have just described. They are
made up of the same three basic building blocks weve just examined.
However, most of these smaller word parts are in Latin, for the very
simple reasons that Latin was the ancient language that was the parent of
our own English language.
Therefore, in order to work out the meaning of a strange word the first
time you see it, all you have to do is learn these Latin word parts, and see
how they fit together to make new words.
THE MOST PROFITABLE WORD GAME YOU WILL EVER PLAY
Listed below are some of the lost common Latin and Greek word
parts in our language. It has been said that from a mere twelve of these
parts, we have built over 2,500 English words. No wonder it pays you
such incredible dividends to learn one or two of them every night.
Lets start with most common front parts. Heres the front part itself,
what it means, and a common English word that uses it. Notice how easy
the word is to understand at a glance, once you know the meaning of the
front part.
FRONT PART
MEANING
COMMON WORD
a, au
ab, abs
ad
am, amb, ambi
amphi
ante
ant, anth, anti
arch, archi
aut, auth, auto
bi, bis
caco
cata
circum
cis
col, com, con, cor
contra, contro
counter
de
di, dis
dia
en
ep, eph, epi
equi
eu
ex, e
extra
hetero
hyper,
hypo,
I, il, im, in, ir, ig
Inter
Intra
Intro
Mal, male
Meta
Mis
Miso
Mono
Multi
Neo
not, without
to free from
to
about, around, both
both, around
before
opposed to
chief, principal
self
two, double
bad, ill
down, complete
around
on this side of
jointly
against
in opposition to
from, down, completely
away from
between
in, into
upon, on, over
equal
well, good
out
beyond, outside of
another, different
over
under, below
not
between
within
place before
bad
after, change
wrong
hatred of
one, alone
many
new
atypical
absolve
adhere
ambiguous
amphibious
anteroom
anti-labour
archbishop
automatic
biennial
cacophonous
catalogue
circumference
cisatlantic
combine
contradict
counteract
deduce
dismiss
dialogue
energetic
epitaph
equidistant
euphony
exit
extraordinary
heterogeneous
hypercritical
hypodermic
inept
interstate
intrastate
introduce
malpractice
metaphor
mislabel
misogyny
monologue
multiply
neophyte
Non
Ob
Ortho
Pan
Para
Per
Peri
Poly
Post
Pre
Pro
Proto
Pseudo
Psycho
Re, red
Retro
Se, sed
Semi
Sub
Super
Syn, sy
Trans, tra
Tri
Ultra
Un, uni
Vice
not
against
correct, right
all
beside
through
around
many
after
before
before
first
false, fictitious
relating to mind or soul
back, again
back, backward
away, aside, apart
half
under
above
together
through, across
three
excessive
one
in place of
nonsense
obstruct
orthoptic
panacea
parallel
permit
perimeter
polygon
postscript
prejudge
pronoun
protocol
pseudopod
psychology
reincarnation
retrospect
secede
semi-circle
submarine
superabundant
syntax
transport
triangle
ultra-modest
uniform
vice versa
Now for END PARTS. Notice how they, too, add to the meaning of every
word they touch.
END PART
MEANING
COMMON WORD
Able, ible
Age
Al
An, ave
An, ain
Ance
Ancy, ency
Ant, ent
Ar
above to be
state
belonging to
belonging to
a member of
quality
quality or state of
one who does
relating to
believable
marriage
constitutional
Georgian
Republican
tolerance
clemency
servant
angular
Ard, art
Ary
Ate
Ation
Cy
Dom
Ee
Eer
En
Ern
Er
Er
Ery
Esque
Ferrous
Fold
Ful
Gram
Graph
Hood
Ial
Ic, ical
Ice
Ify
Il, ile
Ine
Ion
Ious
Ish
Ism
Ist
Ity
Ive
Ize
Less
Ling, long
Logy
Ly
Ment
Ness
Ogy
Or
Ory
coward
secretary
animate
dedication
democracy
martyrdom
assignee
volunteer
moisten
western
miner
Marylander
surgery
statuesque
auriferous
twofold
resentful
telegram
autograph
brotherhood
editorial
fantastic
justice
gratify
versatile
canine
decision
ambitious
bookish
fascism
communist
acidity
abusive
economize
useless
headlong
theology
friendly
investment
happiness
geology
tailor
prohibitory
Ose
Ous
Ry
Sion
Tion
Trix
Tude
Ty
Ure
Vorous
Ward
Wise
Wright
Y, ey
containing
full of
practice of
the act of
the act of
feminine agent
state of
practice of
act of
feeding on
direction of
way of
maker
pertaining to
verbose
mountainous
dentistry
ascension
inspection
executrix
rectitude
fidelity
rapture
carnivorous
eastward
clockwise
playwright
smoky
MEANING
COMMON WORD
Acer, acr
Ag, act, ig
Ali
Ali, allo, alle
Alter
Alt
Ambul
Am, em
Amo, ama
Anim
Annu, enni
Anthrop
Appe
Aqua, aque
Arbiter
sharp
carry on
nourish
other
another
high
walk
friend
love
life
year
man
a call upon
water
a judge
acerbity
agency
alimentary
alias
alter
altitude
amble
amicable
amorous
animation
annual
anthropology
appeal
aquatic
arbitration
Art
Ast, astr
Audi, aur, aus
Bell
Bible
Bio
Brevi
Cad, cas, cid
Cam, chamb
Camp, champ
Cant, chant, cent
Ced, ceed, cess
Celer
Cent
Chief, cap
Cap, capt
Chrom, chromo,
chroma
chron, chrono
cide, cis, cise
cit
civ, civi
clam, claim
clud, cluse
cline
coc, coct
col, cul
cor, cord
corp, corps,
corpor
cras
cred, creed
crea
cresc, crue, cret, crete
crux, cruc
crypt
culp
cur, course
cur, cura
cycl
deca, deci
dem, demo
dens
art
star
hear
hostile
book
life
short
fall
room
country
sing
go
speed
hundred
head
take, seize
color
artistic
astrology
audible
rebellious
bibliography
biology
abbreviate
cadence
chamber
campus
cantate
recede
accelerate
century
captain
capture
panchromatic
time
cut, kill
arouse
citizen
shout
close, shut off
bend
cook
till
hear
body
synchronize
suicide, scissors
excite
civic
clamor
exclude
recline
concoct
cultivate
accord
corporation
tomorrow
believe
create
grow
a cross
hide
guilt
to run
care
wheel
ten
people
thick
procrastinate
incredible
creation
increase
crucifix
cryptogram
culpable
concurrent
curate
cycle
decade
democracy
dense
derm
dexter
di, dia
dic, dict
dign
doc, doct
dom
dom
dorm
du
dur
duc, duct
dynam
err
erg
ego
fac
fer
ferv
fid
fil
fin
firm
flex, flect
flu, flux
fort
found, fuse, fund
fract, frang
frater
gam
go
gen
gest, ger
gov, gub
grad, gress
grand
graph
grat
grav
greg
hab, hib
homos
hydr
skin
right-handed
day
speak
worthy
teach
master
house
sleep
two
hard, lasting
lead
power
wander, go astray
work
I
do
carry
boil
faith, trust
son
limit
strengthen
bend
flow
strong
pour
break
brother
marriage
earth
birth
carry, bear
govern, rule
walk, go
great
write
pleasing, agreeable
heavy
crowd
have, hold
same
water
epidermis
dexterity
diary
dictate
dignitary
doctrine
dominate
domestic
dormitory
duet
durable
educate
dynamic
errant
energy
egotist
factory
transfer
fervent
fidelity
filiate
final
affirm
flexible
fluent
fortress
refund
fragile
fraternity
bigamist
geography
gender
gestation
government
progress
grandeur
autograph
gratitude
gravity
congregate
habit
homonym
hydrant
ject
jud
junct, jug
juven
labor
laud
lav
leg, lig, lect
leg
lib
liber
lig
liter
loc
locu, loqu
log
luc, lum
lud, lus
magn
mand
man, manu
mar, mari
mater, matr
matur
med
men, ment
mens, mest
merg
meter
mis, mit
mon
morph
mor, mort
mov, mot, mob
mut
nasc, nat
ihil
nom, nomin
nov
nym
oper, opus
path
pater, patr
throw
right
join
young
toil, work
praise
wash, clean
read, choose
law
book
free
bind
letter
place
speak, talk
word
light
play
great
order
hand
sea
mother
ripe
middle
mind
month
dip
measure
send
advise
shape
death
move
change
born
nothing
name
new
name
work
feeling
father
reject
judgment
junction
juvenile
laboratory
laudatory
lavatory
legible
legislature
library
liberty
oblige
literal
location
elocution
dialogue
illuminate
allude
magnify
mandate
manual
maritime
maternal
mature
median
demented
semester
submerge
diameter
permit
admonish
amorphous
mortal
remove
mutant
nativity
annihilate
nominate
novice
pseudonym
operator
sympathy
paternal
parl
pars, part
ped, pod
pel, puls
pend, pens
pet
pet, petr
omni
phil
phobia
phon
plic
poli
port
pon, pos
pot
prim
pris, prehen
prob
put
pyr
rog
reg, rec
rupt
sci, scio
scop
scrib, script
seg, sect
sed, ses, sid
sens, sent
sequ, secu, sue
sign
sol
solv, solu
somin
soph
spec, spect, spic
spir, spirit
spond
sta, sti, sist
stead
strict
stru
talk
a part
foot
drive
hang, weigh
seek, ask
rock
all
love
fear
sound
twist
city, state
carry
put, place
power
first
seize, grasp
test
think
fire
question
direct
break
know
watch
write
cut
seat
feel
follow
sign, mark
alone
loosen, free
sleep
wise, wisdom
look, see
breathe
promise
stand
place
bind
build
parliament
partner
pedal
impulse
impending
petition
petrify
omnibus
philosophy
hydrophobia
telephone
complicate
political
portable
exponent
potentate
primary
apprehend
probation
compute
pyromaniac
interrogation
direct
rupture
conscience
telescope
describe
section
session
sentiment
sequence
designate
solitude
absolve
insomnia
sophomore
spectacle
aspire
despond
circumstance
steadfast
district
structure
tact, ting
tail
tang
tend
tena, tain
tent, tempt
term
terr, ter
tele
theo
therm
thesis
tor, tort
tract
trib
typ
umbr
urb
val
ven, vent
ver
vert, vers, verse
via, voy, vio
vinc, vict
vir
voc
vol
volu, volv, volt
zoo
touch
cut
touch
extend
hold
try
end, limit
earth
afar
God
heat
setting, statement
twist
draw
pay, grant
model
shadow
city
strength
come
true
turn
way
conquer
man
call
wish
turn, roll
animal
tactile
curtail
tangible
extend
detain
attempt
terminal
inter
telescope
Theology
thermometer
thesis
distort
tractor
tribute
typical
umbrella
urban
validity
convene
veracity
divert
convey
victor
virile
vocation
voluntary
involve
zoology
And, of course, many more. You should have a page in the back of
your notebook. Every time you discover a new word part, and learn its
meaning, you should immediately write it down on this page for
permanent reference. And, at the same time, you should immediately see
how many different words you can find that use this part to build their
meaning. This is easily one of the most fascinating and profitable word
games you will ever play.
TWO DICTIONARIES EVERYONE SHOULD OWN
To look up these word parts, and to give you the meaning of every
new word you might come across in your home studies, you should have
Words are incredibly powerful mental tools that help you solve
your problems. It has been found that the more successful man, the larger
his vocabulary.
Therefore you must master the words you need for success. This can be
easily done, in these three ways:
1. By developing the habit of searching for the exact right word. This
enlarges your vocabulary, and gives colour and power to every
sentence you speak or write.
2. By teaching yourself the Latin and Greek word parts that make up
our modern English language, and thus recognize hundreds of
strange new words at a glance, without having to interrupt your
reading to look them up immediately in a dictionary.
3. By building your own personal Fundamental Vocabulary
Dictionary for every course you study. Thus you will gain a
complete mastery of the language of that course, gain a deeper
understanding of its way of thought, and cut hours of study time
from the effort it takes you to master it.
We now put these newly learned words to use in your reading and
writing. We begin with your reading.
CHAPTER 5
How to become a master reader in three easy steps
The basic, fundamental skill required for all education is reading.
Your ability to learn effectively, to thoroughly understand any
subject, depends almost entirely on your ability to read. On your ability to
pull facts out of a printed page and make them your own.
Even in mathematics, you must first read the instructions and then
understand precisely what you are to do to solve each of the problems.
If you cannot do this, if you cannot read any printed page that is handed
to you with complete confidence and understanding, then you will go
through crippling handicaps:
1. You will be forever doing unnecessary work. Every assignment
will become doubly difficult read over and over again two or
more times, with each sentence painfully spelled out and only
partially.
2. You will be forever making unnecessary mistakes. For example,
professional educators acknowledge that almost as many errors are
made in tests through sheer misreading or misunderstanding of
instructions alone as through lack of knowledge.
Why burden yourself for the rest of your life with this double waste?
Especially when effective reading active, aggressive reading that tears
knowledge out of the printed page and burns it into your memory for
good is far easier and far faster than the spell-along reading most
people do today.
Heres why.
GOOD READING IS FAR MORE THAN MERELY RECOGNIZING
WORDS
We will assume in this book that you already read normally. In
other words, that you can take the letters c-a-t and put them together to
form the word cat. And that you can take several such words, and read
them in the sentence, The cat chases the mouse.
This, really, is what most people usually mean when they speak of
the activity reading. That you can mechanically scan a printed page and
put the words together from that page to form sentences.
In turn, this mechanical reading, by some magic process, is
supposed to put knowledge in your mind. According to this theory, once
you have to read a sentence, or a series of sentences, the thought
contained in them is supposed to automatically be transferred into your
memory.
Till you have taken the entire assignment hundreds upon hundreds
of words, sentences, and paragraphs and reduced them to a few vital
thoughts that contain the meaning of them all.
And that can be burned into your memory forever in a few short
moments. Ready to be put to use to solve new problems at business, or
to answer questions in an examination the very instant you need them.
THIS IS A NEW WAY TO READ. TWICE AS FAST. FIVE TIMES AS
EFFECTIVE
The rest of this section will be developed to teaching you to read
this new way. It is surprisingly easy to learn. And it is far easier, and far
faster, than your present method.
Let me outline right now what each of the following chapters is
going to teach you.
There are three easy steps to this new reading process. Each of the
next three chapters explains one of them.
Chapter 6 shows you how to set up the search for big ideas. How to
glance over your assignment, in one or two short minutes, and locate each
of its important thoughts before you begin to read.
Chapter 7 shows you how to Power Read. How to flash through
page after page, pulling out and marking down those important thoughts,
merely glancing over their unnecessary details, and finishing with the
assignment in half the time it has taken you before.
Chapter 8 show you how to boil these vital thoughts down into a
few words, and burn them into your memory with the very same action.
Chapter 9 shows you how to use the same three step technique
when you are listening to a lecture. It enables you to understand and
remember what you hear as well as what you read.
When you have finished this section, and put its simple methods to
use, you will be confident, accomplished reader. You will be able to read
any book, any Article, any letter, any report that is given to you, easily,
swiftly, and without fear. You will understand each word you read the
instant you read it. And you will remember the vital points of everything
you read and be able to point them to immediate use.
IN SUMMARY:
Good reading is far more merely recognizing the meaning of
words.
Good reading is an active, aggressive search for the major thoughts that
are contained in these words.
This search has three steps:
1. Locating the main ideas.
2. Separating them from their unnecessary details. And
3. Boiling them down into a few words that can be easily memorized.
Now lets put these three steps into action. Lets examine each of these
three steps into action. Lets examine each of these techniques in detail,
along with concrete example of what they will accomplish for you.
CHAPTER 6
How to pre-read a lesson understand it before you read
Let us suppose that you are given a reading assignment in a night
school. For example, you are told to read Chapter 6 in history book on the
Civil War. Or the next five pages in a book on Cost Accounting. Or
perhaps even a complete book lets say The Red Badge of Courage by
Stephen Crane.
You take the book home. You sit down at your desk at the exact
moment your evening study hour begins. And you open the book to the
page assigned.
What do you do now?
If you simply begin to read the first words you see if you plunge right
into that text without making any further preparation then you are
making a crucial mistake that will cost you hours of wasted effort every
week, and that may cause you to miss the entire point of each lesson.
No one no matter how bright can you really understand an
assignment by simply beginning to read it word after word. Its like
trying to go on a car trip by simply driving on to the first motorway you
see, without getting directions or looking at a map
Your job in reading is to get those directions. To build yourself that
road map. To know exactly what you want to get out of that lesson. And
where its located.
To do this, you pre-read that lesson. You glance over that lesson from
the beginning to end before you start to read it. And you pick out the
following information:
1. Whats the main theme of this lessons? (For example the Civil
War)
2. How much information does this lesson cover? (The period from
1861 to 1864)
3. What are the main thoughts in this lesson that I have to remember?
(The crucial battle that turned the tide of the war)
4. How many of these main thoughts are there? (about five or six)
5. What do I have to remember about each one of these main
thoughts? (The outcome of each battle)
6. Where in the lesson do I find this information? (Now you begin to
read)
JUST LOOK AT THE DIFFERENCE THESE FEW QUESTIONS
MAKE
Now, what exactly has happened here? You have invested one or
two brief minutes to glance over your lesson from beginning to end. In
that short time, you have picked out its main theme and each of its central
thoughts. You have built a skeleton of that lesson an outline of that
lesson - a road map of that lesson to follow as you read.
Now you know what you are looking for. Now you are walking a
lighted path instead of stumbling in the dark. Now, instead of facing a
confused jumble words, you slash through that lesson with this definite
purpose in mind:
What do I have to remember about each one of my main thoughts?
(What was the outcome of each battle in this history lesson?)
Now you read to answer this question. You have direction. In one
or two minutes, you have a better grasp of that assignment than if read it
aimlessly for a full hour.
HOW YOU FIND THESE MAIN THOUGHTS: SIGN POSTS IN THE
LESSON THAT POINT THEM RIGHT OUT TO YOU
Fortunately, the authors of your books agree with this road-map
idea. They too believe that you should first build an outline of the
important thoughts in each lesson, and then simply fill in the details.
In order to help you do this, they have built into their books certain
signposts that point out these main thoughts. These signposts stick out
from the main body of the text.
They are the chapter headings, section headings, table of contents,
summary paragraphs, and other vital points set off by capital letters,
underlining, italics, and other attention-drawings devices.
They form a book within a book. And by learning how to read
them, you can pick out the main points of that book almost as fast as you
can turn its pages.
Lets see how to really use them, right now. Lets start with big
signposts, the ones that will give you the guts of that entire book in five to
ten minutes.
And then lets work our way down to the smaller signposts, the
ones that will organize your learning each time you read another chapter
in that book.
For our first few chapters, well use this book the one youre
reading now. This will give you a chance to check your present reading
You see the relationships between each of the various chapters and
the main theme of the book. You know exactly where you are
going when you start to read to such a degree that you can even
set up a time schedule of so many days per chapter to finish the
book when you have to.
For example: In this book, the table of contents is broken down
into six main parts, and then into twenty-four chapters. Lets start
with the main parts first, and see how they give us the over-all plan
of the book at a glance. Here they are:
The Simple Strategy Of Power Learning. (What we are going to do
how we are going to do it.)
Digging Out the Facts Reading.
Expressing the Facts Writing and Conversing.
Mathematics Can Be Fun, If You Do It This Way.
Mastering Facts The Art of Remembering and Review.
How to Breeze Through Tests.
By simply glancing at these six titles, you immediately see that the
book is going to concentrate on reading, writing, and mathematics to the
extent of devoting full sections to each of them. Then its going to show
you how to review for any test you may encounter, and make top grades
in them.
Thus the general goal of being a 5 minute learning machine
(becoming learning machine in only 5 minutes a day)
, which was promised in the title, has now been broken down into
specific, step-by-step goals of improving your reading, writing, and
ability to solve problems, helping you over problem areas, and sharpening
your ability to take tests.
Now the table of contents goes on to show us more concretely how
were going to accomplish each one of these major goals. It does this by
listing the chapter headings under each of them. For example, in the next
part of this book, on writing, we find these two chapters:
Correct Spelling Made Easy.
How to Write as Easily and Quickly As You Think.
Now you can see that there are only two steps to improve your
writing. First, spelling; then the actual construction of sentences and
paragraphs.
Again we see the grand plan of the book developing before your eyes.
From the over-all goal becoming a learning machine in only 5 minutes a
day, we have gone on to the six major steps for doing this, and then we
have taken one of those steps, which is writing, and learned two separate
ways in which it alone can be improved.
We can do the same thing for each of the other four major parts of the
book. Each major part of the book has its own chapter headings
underneath it, which shows you step by step how you are going to
achieve it.
You have now finished reading the title and the table of contents. You
have spent perhaps five minutes on the book so far. And yet know :
1. What it is going to do for you, and
2. How it is going to do it, perfectly
From this point on, you will read simply to answer the questions each
one of these chapter headings has raised in your mind. For example,
going back to section on writing again:
How do I spell a word correctly when I have misspelled it every
time before now?
What are the techniques that allow me to write easily and quickly?
At this point you could open to the first page of text, and read faster
and with much greater understanding than you have ever read before.
But, before you do this, there are two other big signposts you will want to
check, to help you get every ounce of information out of the book.
3. The INDEX
What it tells you: The index is a storehouse of minor topics of special
interest to you. There they are alphabetically arranged for instant
reference.
For example: Glance at the index of this book. Pick out a topic of
special interest to you, or a problem that you are facing today. For
instance, take problem-solving. Look up problem-solving in the index.
Turn to the pages indicated there. And glance at, do not read, the
treatment given to them.
Instantly you can see the concrete, step-by-step methods that make
those problems easy. Theres no need to read them, word by word,
now, since youll get up to them later this week. And in the proper
time and place in the book, theyll means far more to you.
But now you know that theyre there, and that theyre complete.
And if you ever have to refer back to them after you finish the book,
the index will tell you where theyre located at a glance. And now we
turn to the last of our big signposts:
4. THE INTRODUCTION, OR PREFACE, OR FOREWORD.
What it tells you: This is the authors personal message to you, before
he gets down to the body of the book. In it, he may
Explain why he chose this particular title,
Or tell you what compelled him to write the book,
Or show you in advance what he is trying to accomplish,
Or give you a brief, one or two paragraph condensation of its contents,
Or list the main sources from which he got his information,
Or list the main reason why this book should be important to you,
Or in any other way give you a brief outlining of where you will be
heading in the book and what benefits it will give you.
It is the personal note, the personal touch that rounds out your
quick survey of the book and give you insight into the author himself
and his purpose in writing the book, as well as its contents.
For example: The introduction in this book is divided into three
distinct parts, each of which serves a very definite purpose.
Part 1 of the introduction points out the overwhelming importance
of learning power to your future, and lists ten reasons why it is so
vital.
Part 2 shows you that this door opening ability to absorb and use
facts is really not that hard to develop and, once you learn the right
technique, is actually well within the reach of any man or women of
average or better ability.
Now lets see how easy it is to pull out the main thoughts of each chapter
in the same exact way.
CHAPTER 7
Signpost parts of every chapter, and what each one tells you
In the section above, when we looked at the four big signposts in
every book the title, the table of contents, the index, and the
introduction we used this book as our example.
This technique is used every time you open a new book. Using this
technique, you get a birds-eye view of the entire book, the first day you
begin it. During the rest of the book, chapter by chapter, you are merely
filling in important details, deepening your understanding of the grand
plan you discovered in your first survey of the book.
To do this, apply to each individual chapter the same quick-survey
you used at the beginning of the book. To illustrate this technique in
action, lets turn now to three fresh examples to typical textbooks you
will meet in your work.
And let us see exactly what you should do to them, step by step.
How much material you have left and how much you have discarded
when you have finished reducing them to their main thoughts. And how
you burn that material into your memory, for good.
Here are these examples, first reproduced word for word (I suggest
you simply glance over them briefly now):
CHAPTER FROM A TEXTBOOK ON ENGLISH
The four kinds of sentences
A declarative sentence makes a statement. It is followed by a period.
EXAMPLE: Arthur is an accountant
An interrogative sentence asks something. It is a question. It is followed
by a question mark.
EXAMPLE: Do you have an accountant working for you?
Aegean Civilization
Aegean Civilization, which lasted for some two thousand years
down to about 1100 B.C, apparently centred on the island of Crete at the
southern entrance to the Aegean Sea. Crete had many natural advantages.
Its mild climate favoured agriculture; the sea give it some protection
against invasion and conquest and at the same time promoted seafaring.
Located at the cross-roads of the Eastern Mediterranean, Crete was close
enough to Asia, Africa and Europe for daring seaman to sail their
primitive vessels to Egypt and Greece. Its geographical position doubtless
made trade and piracy the natural occupations of the islanders. (2)
When copper and the manufacture of bronze were introduced, probably
from Phoenicia or elsewhere in Asia Minor at some time before 3000
B.C, civilization began on Crete. The civilization is termed Minoan, from
Minos, a legendary king, and archaeologists have divided it into three
main chronological (3) :
Early Minoan down to 2300 B.C
Middle Minoan 2300 to 1600 B.C
Late Minoan 1600 to 100 B.C (4)
Each of these main periods is subdivided into three segments, from
I to III. The greatest flowering of culture on Crete seems to have occurred
during the Middle Minoan III and the late Minoan I and II, between 1700
and 1400 B.C (5)
We must say seems to have occurred, for our knowledge of ancient
Crete is still incomplete. Up to the beginning of the twentieth century it
was so sketchy that no methodical approach to its civilization was
possible.
Then, in 1900, the British archaeologist, Sir Arthur Evans, acting on the
well-founded hunch, began excavations at Cnossus in central Crete, a few
miles inland from north shore of the island. He struck pay-dirt almost at
once and started to uncover what was evidently a very large and very
ancient palace, which he termed the palace of Minos. Subsequent
diggings by Evans and others disclosed the sites of more than hundred
towns that had existed before 1500 B.C, a good amount of pottery, and
stretches of paved road. (6)
IN SUMMARY:
The five roads to cost reduction are:
1. Raw materials
2. The costs of capital equipment
3. Manufacturing costs.
4. Sales Expenses
5. General and administrative expense. (26)
Once possible economies have been uncovered it is necessary to
prosecute them vigorously, lest they fail of accomplishment through
inertia and resistance to change. (27)
NOW LETS GET TO WORK ON THOSE CHAPTERS. HERES
HOW THE CHAPTER SIGNPOSTS BREAK THEM DOWN FOR
YOU, IN MINUTES.
As you could tell at a glance, its simply not enough for you to just
read these sample chapters, word by word, from start to finish. If you try
to do this, you will confuse detail with main idea, and you will remember
almost nothing when you are through reading.
What you need is a key a system that will unlock that mass of
words and pull out the main ideas for you.
This key is PRE-READING. The ability to read chapter signposts at a
glance, and use them to pinpoint the main ideas of the chapter, one after
the other, and give purpose and direction to your reading.
There are eight signposts parts of every chapter that you should know
as well your own name. Lets review them one by one, and see how they
pull the main ideas right out of these chapters before you begin to read
the text.
1. THE CHAPTER TITLE
What it tells you: What the chapter is about. What it includes and does
not include.
Examples: In the first chapter, the title The Four Kinds of Sentences
show you that there are a specific number of definitions to learn four.
And each of these definitions describes a different kind of sentence. Thus
you know immediately what you are looking for definitions and how
many you must find four.
The third sample chapter gives the same information in its title. Five
Roads to Cost Reduction tells you that you must find a specific number of
ways to reduce costs five and must discover how and in what ways
each one works.
The title of the second chapter: THE GREEKS, I. The Background is
more vague. It does not tell how many parts you are to follow. But it does
tell you that you are going to study Greeks, and what you are going to
look for in the first section of the chapter is the effect of their background
upon them. You must now read on, to the next chapter signposts, to
discover what you must find out about their background. To do this, you
turn to:
2. THE SECTION HEADINGS
What they tell you: The section headings break down the over-all
chapter heading into its main parts. They list the names and number of
important subjects to be covered in the chapter. Reading them quickly,
without the intervening text, gives you the skeleton of the chapter.
Examples: The section headings in our third sample chapter read as
follows:
Road 1: Raw Materials
Road 2: The Costs of Capital Equipment
Road 3: Manufacturing Costs
Road 4: Sales Expense
Road 5: General and Administrative Expense
Here are the five roads to cost reduction mentioned in the chapter title,
laid out for you at a glance. You now know the entire structure of the
chapter. Your only task now is to read the text, and find out how you can
reduce costs in each of these areas.
In sample Chapter 2, however, the section headings are fewer in
number and more vague. They are:
Aegean Civilization, and
The Setting of Greek Civilization
These give you the two main sources of the background of Greek
civilization. But they do not yet give you enough information on what
you are to find out about each. Therefore you must go on to further
signposts, which we will describe in a moment.
And in our first sample chapter, there are no section headings at all. So
you check the next chapter signpost, which is:
3. PARAGRAPH HEADS OR BOLD PRINTS
What they tell you: The main topic of each paragraph. What the
paragraph contains, boiled down into a single phrase.
For example: In this first sample chapter, the author has carefully
stated the name of each kind of sentence. Listing them in order, we have:
Declarative sentence
Interrogative sentence
Exclamatory sentence
Imperative sentence
Immediately, you know the names of the four kinds of sentences you
are to learn in this lesson. Now all you have to do is read the text, and
find out a definition for each of them.
In the other two sample chapters, there are no paragraph headings.
And so we turn to the next chapter signpost:
4. INTRODUCTION PARAGRAPHS
What they tell you: Here the author points out what to look for in the
text that follows. He gives an introduction to the chapter, ties it into the
chapters that came before it, and reveals the main thought or thoughts in
the material in the remainder of the chapter.
For example: In the second sample chapter, the author begins with this
introductory paragraph (for the purposes of this survey, lets break the
paragraph apart, point out each of its main thoughts, and state the
purpose):
The ancient Greeks developed the first government that might be
called democratic and the first civilization to take permanent root on the
mainland of Europe.
In any case, these final words deserve careful study before you begin
the text.
For example: Since there is no summary paragraph in our second
sample chapter, lets use the one in the third chapter as our example. It
reads:
In Summary:
The five roads to cost reduction are:
1. Raw Materials
2. The Costs of Capital Equipment
3. Manufacturing Costs
4. Sales Expense
5. General and Administrative Expense
Once possible economies have been uncovered, it is necessary to
prosecute them vigorously, lest they fail of accomplishment through
inertia and resistance to change.
These sentences confirm what you have already discovered. You are
now doubly sure that you have the five roads to cost reduction firmly
outlined in your mind; and, especially on the basis of the last paragraph in
the summary, now you only have to read on to discover how you can
reduce costs in each of these areas.
You now turn to the next chapter signpost:
6. THE FIRST SENTENCE OF EACH PARAGRAPH
What they tell you: As you remember, this Pre-Reading, this quick
survey of an entire chapter before you begin the text, is essentially a
search. A search for the main thoughts of the chapter for a quick outline
of that chapter that tells you exactly what you are looking for and where
to find it.
This search begins with the chapter title, and continues one by one,
with each of the following chapter signposts till you have uncovered
those main ideas-till you have built your outline.
At this point, when you have located the main ideas in the chapter,
you stop the Pre-Reading and begin the text. The Pre-Reading is a search
for the chapters main ideas. When you have found them, you begin to
read.
Therefore you do not check all the chapter signposts in each PreReading of each chapter. You check only enough signposts to give you
your main ideas, and then ignore the others.
For example, in the first sample chapter, you needed only to read the
chapter title, then check to see that there were no section headings, and
then simply pick up your main ideas out of underlined paragraph
headings. At that point, you had the four kinds of sentences, and would
immediately begin to read the text to find a definition for each.
However, it is the second sample chapter that forces you to make a
deeper survey. In this second chapter, you have read title, found only two
section headings, found no paragraph heads, discovered that the
introductory paragraph merely confirms and two main ideas you learned
from the section headings, and again found that there was no summary
paragraph.
So what you have gained from your first five signposts is this. You
know that you are to learn about the background of Greek civilization.
And you know that there are two sources of this background the
Aegean civilization, and the geographical setting of Greece.
What you still do not know, however, is what each of these sources
contributed to Greek civilization. You have to uncover these
contributions how many there were and what each of them was before
you can begin reading with definite clear-cut goals in mind.
Therefore, you probe deeper. You turn to the next chapter signpost
the first sentence of each paragraph.
In most cases, especially if the author has done his work well, these
first sentences are called topic sentences. They give the main idea of the
paragraph, and let the remaining sentences fill in the details.
So, if you take the first sentence of each paragraph and string them
together, you should have a fairly good outline of the mina ideas in the
chapter.
Unfortunately, this method is not as automatic or as clear cut as those
using the first five signposts. You have to use more judgment in weeding
out paragraphs that dont really contain main ideas.
But in those rare cases when the first five signposts dont do this job,
you must go on with the sixth. Lets see how this method opens up the
main ideas in this massive second chapter:
For example: The first sentences of each paragraph in the second
chapter are these. (We will give each sentence the number of the
paragraph it comes from. And we will leave out the first introductory
sentence, since we have already covered it):
AEGEAN CIVILIZATION
2. Aegean civilization, which lasted for some two thousand years
down to about 1100B.C., apparently centred on the island of Crete
at the southern entrance to the Aegean Sea.
3. When the copper and the manufacture of bronze were introduced,
probably from Phoenicia or elsewhere in Asia Minor at some time
before 3000 B.C., civilization begun on Crete
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
(Unimportant)
(Unimportant)
(Unimportant)
(Unimportant)
The archaeological remains, however, provide convincing evidence
that the Minoans were great builders, engineers and artists.
9. (Unimportant)
10. Crete at the height of its power may have controlled an empire
including the other Aegean islands and, perhaps, the Aegean shores
of Asia Minor and Greece.
11. (Unimportant)
12. Thanks to Schliemann and later experts, we now know that by
1400 B.C. Troy and a group of cities centred at Mycenae in Greece
had attained a degree of civilization strikingly similar to what had
apparently been reached in Crete centuries earlier.
13. (Unimportant)
14. The forces of nature played a large part in shaping Greek
civilization
15. (Unimportant)
16. (Unimportant)
17. The Greek homeland, however, had one great geographical
advantage: its situation encouraged navigation, even by the very
timid.
18. The geography of Greece favoured political decentralization/
19. (Unimportant)
When you lift these chapter signposts out of the text and arrange them
in order, you will have an outline of the main thoughts of that chapter at
your finger tips.
You may then flash-read that chapter merely skimming over the
unimportant details and concentrating only on definite information on
each of these main thoughts.
We now turn to a simply trick that will automatically show you
exactly what information you must look for on each one of these main
points.
CHAPTER 8
How to turn the chapters main thoughts into questions,
to automatically pinpoint the information you need about
them
Now lets list the outlines you have built by Pre-Reading the three
sample chapters in this book.
In the first sample chapter your outline will be as simple as this:
THE FOUR KIND OF SENTENCES
1. Declarative sentence.
2. Interrogative sentence.
3. Exclamatory Sentence.
4. Imperative Sentence.
In the second sample chapter, this is the outline youve worked out:
THE GREEKS, I. BACKGROUND
Aegean Civilization
Located at Crete, Troy and Mycenae. All made the same
contributions.
Contributions were in metals, building, engineering, politics,
seafaring, warfare.
The Setting of Greek Civilization.
Raw Materials.
Capital Equipment.
Manufacturing Costs.
Sales Expense.
General and Administrative Expense.
At this point, you have the main ideas of each sample chapter at
your fingertips. But your knowledge of the chapter is, of course, still
incomplete. Now you must read the text itself, to find what you should
know about each one of these main points.
And how do you tell again in advance of actually reading the text
exactly what it is that you should know about each one of these
points?
The answer is simplicity itself. You merely
1. Turn each one of these main points into a question. And then
2. Read the text to find out their answers.
Its as easy as that. Now lets see this question-and-answer
technique in action.
THE SIX BASIC QUESTIONS
Any idea any word, any phrase, any sentence can be turned into
a question simply by putting in front of it one of these six little words:
What?
Why?
Where?
When?
Who?
How?
These are extremely valuable words. You should memorize them
from this moment on. They have been called, and rightly so, the Six Tiny
Keys to Knowledge. Lets see what they can do when we apply them to
the main thoughts in each one of our sample chapters.
TURNING THE FIRST SAMPLE OUTLINE INTO A SERIES
OF QUESTIONS
First, you start with the chapter title. Placing the word what in front
of it, you get:
What are the four kinds of sentences?
This question has already been answered for you by the section
headings in your online declarative, interrogative, exclamatory, and
imperative. So you put the same question to each of these four kinds of
sentences, like this:
What is the definition of a declarative sentence?
What is the definition of an interrogative sentence?
What is the definition of an exclamatory sentence?
What is the definition of an imperative sentence?
You now know exactly what information you are looking for about
each one of your main points. You now read to answer these questions, to
discover that information, and skim over everything else.
TURNING THE SECOND SAMPLE OUTLINE INTO A SERIES
OF QUESTIONS
Again, you first start with the chapter title. Placing the word what
in front of it, you get:
What are the background sources of Greek civilization?
This question has already been answered for you in the two section
headings the Aegean civilization and the geographical setting. So you
question each one of the section headings in turn, like this:
Placing the word where in front of the first section heading, you
get:
Where was Aegean civilization located?
Your paragraph headings answer this question at Crete, Troy and
Mycenae. So you ask again:
What were their contributions to Greek civilizations?
CHAPTER 9
How to power-read master an assignment in minutes
You have now finished your quick survey of the chapter. You have
pulled out its main thoughts and turned them into questions. You are now
ready to read text, word by word, to answer these questions.
Lets see how you do this, in the shortest possible time, without
missing a single a vital point.
HOW TO DOULBE YOUR READING RATE
2.
3.
Dont move your head from side to side. This tires you out
and again slows up your reading. Only your eyes should
move. Only your eyes need move.
4.
5.
And so you continue with your reading, using this same technique
to weed out 95 per cent of the unimportant words in the chapter; to
concentrate only on the answers to your main-thought questions; and to
build up, answer by answer, the complete, easily remembered Main
Thought Outline of this lesson, which we will examine in the next
chapter.
HOW TO POWER-READ THIRD SAMPLE CHAPTER
As a contrast, lets take paragraph 24 of this chapter. Heres how it
stands in the textbook:
The fifth avenue of cost reduction consists of analysis of general
and administrative expenses. In the normal company these cover such
items as salaries of executives and office employees, office expense,
interest, property depreciation, taxes, insurance, donations, legal fees,
consultants, investigation of possible mergers, economic services and
other general business expense.
Here the answer to the question gives eleven or more ways to cut
costs in this area, and all are underlined. Later, when you build your Main
Thought Outline, you will combine several of them so they can be more
easily memorized.
At the present point, however, you continue to read on until you
have finished the chapter, answered each of your questions and
thoroughly understand each of its main points.
IN SUMMARY:
Once you have made your Pre-Reading survey, with its questions
to be answered, the actual reading of the lesson becomes incredibly fast
and easy.
During this reading, you will skim over about 90 per cent of the
text, searching only for the answers to your main thought questions, and
letting their details stick to your memory automatically.
And when you find a main-thought answer, you actively underline
it, making each word that you will use later to remember it by.
CHAPTER 10
Note taking. How to remember what youve read and put it to
immediate use
You are now ready for the pay-off, the moment when you master
the meaning of the chapter and make it your own.
What have you done so far? All this:
1. Picked out the main thoughts of the chapter.
2. Turned them into questions.
3. Weeded out material that did not answer those questions, and
which you will never have to look at again.
4. Located the answers to those questions the vital information
that composes the back bone of that book.
5. Marked that vital information separate from the rest of the
chapter.
You now have everything you need to know about every main
thought in that chapter, in your own personal language, making fifty
words do the work of five thousand.
Now you rewrite the chapter, in your own personal language,
making fifty words do the work of five thousand.
YOUR NOTEBOOK, WHERE YOU RE-CREATE THE
BACKBONE MEANING OF EACH CHAPTER, EACH BOOK, EACH
COURSE
In addition to you own mind, you have only three basic tools to
open up the entire world of knowledge to your grasp:
Your textbook.
Your pencil.
After the assignment page, for each course, come the Main
Thought Outline pages you will write up, day after day, as you master
that course.
These pages are not haphazard in any way. They are not written in
the classroom, not written while you are actually reading the text. There
is no room on them for illegible scrawls, written daydreaming, or doodles
of any kind.
They are carefully and precisely prepared, in this way:
1.When you have finished reading the chapter, and when you have
underlined the answers to the main-thought questions that you have
prepared, you then close the book.
2.You are now ready to put your knowledge of the backbone of
that chapter to its first test. To do this, you take a blank sheet of paper
not in your notebook and from memory you write down each of the
main thoughts of that chapter and the information you have learned about
them.
3.You will forget some of these points. You will write down some
of them out of order. You will find that you still dont clearly understand
some of the information about them. None of this is important. What is
important is the fact that you have just made you first recitation, taken
your first self-test on that chapter.
4.You now go back to the text and check and correct your outline.
You write the corrections directly onto that rough outline.
5.When you have finished it, when you have boiled down and
correctly arranged to your own satisfaction, then you turn that paper over.
You open your notebook. And you write that outline again from
memory on one page of that notebook.
6.What you are doing is freeing yourself, step by step, from the
crutch of that textbook. You are transferring knowledge out of that
textbook into your own memory, and then into your notebook for instant
reference. And each step of the way you are condensing that knowledge,
memorizing and rememorizing it, understanding it more deeply and
clearly with each word you write.
Poor soil and climate forced Greeks to seek their fortunes overseas.
Easy navigability made sea transportation easier and more profitable
than land. Rough terrain encouraged individual city-states.
THE FINISHED OUTLINE FOR OUR THIRD SAMPLE CHAPTER
FIVE ROADS TO COST REDUCTION
1.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
4.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
5.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e. Donations
f. Legal fees.
g. Consultants and other economic services.
TIPS ON IMPROVING YOUR OUTLINES
1. Simplify. Keep compressing, boiling down, making the outline
shorter and shorter. Use phrases instead of sentences.
Eliminate unnecessary words and details. Blend subordinate
sentences into others by boiling them down into one or two
words. Keep cutting till each idea stands sharp and clear in a
few easy-to-remember words.
2. Fit the ideas together properly. Make sure one leads into the
other in the right order. Then, when you think of the first idea,
the second automatically pops into your mind.
3. What are the kinds of order you can use to make one idea fit in
with another? Here are a few:
A. Parts of Something.
Example:
Kinds of birds:
1. Sparrow
2. Robin
3. Bluebird, etc
B. Time Order.
Example:
Battles of World War II :
1. Poland.
2. Holland.
3. France.
4. Britain, etc.
C. Step-by-Step Sequence.
Example:
How to Build a Work Bench:
1. Check each part and arrange in order.
These questions force you to think. To tie in. To relate forward and
backward. And to become accustomed to expressing your thoughts in
your own words.
When you are through with that simple review each night, you know
that you have mastered that material. And youre confident that you can
talk sense about it to anyone.
THE NEXT EVENING
And the next evening, on your way to class, take one brief look over
these notes. Driving to school, walking through the halls, with your
notebook closed, run through these three magic questions:
In one sentence, what did I learn from last nights chapter? (That the
five roads to cost reduction are through reducing raw materials costs,
manufacturing costs, capital equipment costs, sales costs, and general and
administration costs.)
How does this tie in which the chapter before? (Its a second way of
increasing profits, right after improved management.)
What questions will I be asked on it in next weeks test? (To list
several ways of reducing costs in each one of these areas. And run
through them.)
Using this planning technique, in half the time that it would have
taken you to read that chapter before, you are now ready to go in that
classroom and make your friend eyes pop open in amazement.
IN SUMMARY:
There is an easy, simple, organized way to master the contents of any
assignment. It consists of the following three steps:
1.
2.
3.
These are the three Magic Keys to Expert Reading. You should
practice them again and again and again, until they become second
nature. They will pay you dividends for the rest of your life.
CHAPTER 11
How to get twice as much out of your daily reading
Now lets put these reading skills to work for you in another area.
Lets see how they can save you time and effort every single day.
Double the amount of information you get out of a magazine or
newspaper. Cut your business reading time in half. Let you flash right
through the latest best-seller- and dazzle your friends that same evening
with the insights you have into every one of its events and characters.
Lets start with the Number One source of information for most
people your newspaper:
HOW THE PROFESSIONALS READ THEIR NEWSPAPER
You need two separate skills two separate patterns of action to
get the most out of your daily paper:
1. How to read your newspaper as a whole.
2. How to read each individual news story that catchers your
eye.
First, lets set up an over-all pattern of attack a timed, step-bystep procedure that will tear out all the important facts from your paper
for you every evening or morning.
Heres how we do it step by step:
1. When you open your newspaper in the morning, the first thing
you do is skim all the headlines on the front page. (Or, if you read a
tabloid, skim all the headlines of the first four or five pages.)
What you are trying to achieve here with this first rapid, over-all
view of the headlines is to see the world in one piece. To get a birdseye view of all the important events of the day at one time. And to see if
possible how each of these events ties in to all the others.
For example, consider the fateful week of October 12, 1964.
Scanning the typical newspaper of any day that week, you would see that
the Labour government had just been elected in England that
Khrushchev had been pushed out of the Soviet government that Red
China had exploded an atomic bomb that Johnson and Goldwater were
battling for the presidency of the United States.
Now, what does this birds-eye view show you? First of all
change! Country after country is changing internally. And the balance of
power itself is changing externally. But exactly how? How rapidly?
Towards What?
How do these events tie in to each other? What is the connection
between Khrushchevs fall from power and the Chinese bomb? What
effect will both these events have on the American election?
This first two-minute glance tells you what happened on that day,
and leads you to set up questions in your mind about why it happened,
and what effect one event will, have on the other.
You now read to answer these questions. You do it in this way:
HOW TO READ A NEWS STORY
2. Now you start on the articles themselves. Your objective here is
to get the big facts the important facts- out of each story as fast as you
can, without missing a single vital detail.
You do this by going back to the headline, and turning it into a
series of questions. For example:
KHRUSHCHEV REMOVED FROM POWER
2. Read each articles title and subtitle the first paragraph all
subheads and the last paragraph or two. This should give you the main
idea, and enough information to tell you whether you want to read further
or not.
3. If you do go further, again ask questions before you read word
by word. Remember magazines present more than mere fact; they also
give you opinion. So, if you come across this kind of headline:
Lets take correspondence and the rest first. Heres how to lick
it:
1. When you pick up a business letter, first glance at the
letterhead then immediately at the signature. (If its a
memo, look at the origin and content information at the top.)
Ask yourself these questions:
2. Now sweep down the letter with a glance. Most letters are
usually very simple. They deal with one, two or three things.
Can you see at a glance what they are? What the writer
wants you to do?
3. Now read the last paragraph first. The information you want
what the writer wants you to do should be summarized in
the last paragraph.
4. Glance only briefly at the first paragraphs. Theyre usually
filled with mere formalities (We have your letter of the
Thank you for We note with great pleasure etc.) Skip
them. Get to the heart of the matter fast.
5. Concentrate your attention at mid-page. Here are the reasons
why the specific step-by-step that he wants done the
statements on which youll have to base your decision with
regard to this letter.
6. Now you can tell these facts about the letter:
Is it important? If not, glance briefly through the rest, and get
rid of it.
Is it your department? If not, send it to the person whose job it
is.
Does it demand an answer? If so, answer it there and then, so
you wont have to read it twice.
Does it demand action? If so, delegate it immediately.
Get it started at once.
7. In reading memos and reports, read them backwards. Look
first at the point of origin and the man who wrote it. Then
After youve boiled it down, turn the index card over and try to repeat
its contents to yourself from memory. Try to get every numbered point
in the proper sequence. This gives you a stronger grip on the articles
organization and burns its main points into memory.
7. Now decide what to do with that information. Put it to work. Use
it. Adapt it. Pass it on to others so they can understand you better
when you call on them to back you up. Dont just file and forget it.
New information means new ability-new power-new competence.
In the long run-if its put to use-it means new prestige and new
money!
IN SUMMARY:
You can double the amount of reading you get done every day- and
remember twice as much of it - if you follow these simple rules:
1. Look before you leap. Get the main idea first. Dont start reading
word-by-word till you know it.
2. Ask questions. Read to answer them. Stop reading when youve
got their answers.
3. Skip details. Theyll only confuse you while youre reading - slip
out of your mind as soon as you close the page. Concentrate on the
core. Number it. Memorize it.
4. Then put it to work. Remember - new knowledge means new
opportunity.
CHAPTER 12
The all-important art of listening-right down to reading the
speakers thoughts
In addition to reading, you gain the information you need by
listening.
In fact, in the business and social worlds, your ability to listen well
is even important than your ability to read well. Most people gain about
80 per cent of all new facts through their ears, not their eyes.
Therefore hearing everything that is said, and missing nothing, is
an indispensable art. But it is an art. It is not a natural gift. You must
teach it to yourself. Just as you must learn how to read, so you must learn
how to listen in this simple but tremendously powerful way:
HOW TO DEVELOP YOUR LISTENING POWER IN A FEW
MINUTES EVERY NIGHT
When do you start to develop this ability to listen with the power of
a tape recorder?
Start this way. Some night at the dinner table make up a new game
for the family. Ask someone to read you a list of objects, cars, baseball
players, the names of his friends what have you. Then try to name back
that list in the order in which they gave it to you.
Its as simple as that. Start with a list of ten objects. Compete with
your family. Award prizes. See how many you can name, and how much
you can improve. At first youll remember six or seven. Then eight or
nine. Then all ten perfectly.
As you go along, make the game harder. Have someone tell you a
story, and repeat the important facts. Then a newspaper article. Ask them
to try to stick you with specific names and figures. Watch yourself repeat
them back, number by number.
Youll be astounded at how much you can retain. And how youve
learned the first secret of good listening strengthening your ear
channel memory learning to remember everything important that you
hear.
Now youre ready for the second step.
HOW TO CONCENTRATE ON THE SPEAKERS THOUGHTS, AND
NEVER BE DISTRACTED
And so on, with other questions that will come to your mind as
you seek the inner meaning of the speakers words.
All these questions have one vital trait common. They turn
listening from a passive to an active occupation. They stop drifting. They
force you to think step by step with the speaker. To keep your mind
constantly focused on that speakers thoughts, both expressed and
unexpressed. To literally pull the core meaning out of that lecture as it
develops in front of you.
And then, as you do in your reading, night after night, you store
that core meaning on paper so you can have it for good. In this way:
HOW TO TAKE LECTURE NOTES
You now have two powerful tools that enable you to capture the
inner meaning of any spoken statement, lecture or conversation you may
hear.
You have developed a strong listening memory, so you can hold
entire thoughts and sentences in your mind after hearing them only once.
And you have the ability to keep your attention focused on the
speakers thoughts, both expressed and unexpressed, for as long as
necessary to pull out the inner meaning of those thoughts as it develops in
front of you.
In your formal education, you now make these two gifts even more
effective by learning how to re-create the backbone meaning of any
lecture you may attend in your own notebook, where you will have it
for instant reference whenever you need it.
Because a word is spoken once and then is lost forever, lecture
notes are prepared differently from reading notes. Though the end result
is the same, the technique of capturing the main thoughts must work far
faster in the lecture hall, for example, than in the reading room.
Here is that technique, step by step:
1.
3.
4.
5.
Write at the top of that paper the date, the name of the
lecturer (if it is different from your regular teacher).
And the subject of the lecture as soon as it is
announced.
6.
Once you know the main them of the lecture, your next
goal is obvious. You must chart the development of
that central theme through one vital thought after
another. You are now building your outline from the
speakers words listening for main thoughts and
writing each of them down in order.
8.
9.
It is important to note
Be sure to know
Pay special attention to
Or he may come right out and say it:
Youll be asked to
This will be a test question
Once you hear these clues, set this point off from the rest of the
lecture in this way. Mark a large TQ (for Test Question) beside
it. Then, in your review later on, you can give it special
attention.
HOW TO FINISH THE NOTES SO THEY CONTAIN
EVERYTHING YOU NEED FROM THE LECTURE
12.
Written down the central theme at the top of your paper. Jot
down the main headings as they were either outlined at the
beginning of the lecture, or as they emerged during its
development,
Left plenty of room after each of these headings to serve as
main-thought traps to pick up their vital sub-points,
Filtered out these sub-points by careful, active listening and by
following the clues the speakers signal words gave you.
13.
14.
If you have the time, stay in the lecture hall after the
others have left, and rewrite them there. Use the first
available five minutes to fix those notes firmly in your
notebook and in your mind.
15.
First, because it trains you away from attempting your own shortcut methods, where you may leave out vital steps and get hopelessly lost.
And it eliminates the necessity for you to copy answers rather than
mastering the methods that produce them.
When you start to apply problem-solving techniques, there will be
no pat answers to copy. Then only methods will be of any use. (And, if
you are going to compete, you had darned well better know them.)
And secondly, this step-by-step copying of sample problems is one
more way of assuring attentiveness. Again, the best way by far to learn,
with a pencil in your hand.
IN SUMMARY:
Power-listening can be developed as effectively as Power-reading,
simply by learning a few easy techniques. These are:
Strengthening you listening memory, so you can retain whole
phrases, thoughts, and sentences in your mind after hearing them only
once.
Teaching yourself to maintain full concentrated attention on the
speakers words, so that no important thought, expressed or unexpressed,
can escape you.
And learning how to boil a lecture down into its vital thoughts,
each in its proper order, so you can store the backbone meaning of the
lecture in your mind and your notebook for instant reference whenever
you need it.
PART THREE
Expressing the facts writing and conversing
CHAPTER 13
The first essential correct spelling made easy
But, once you have developed that distorted image of the word,
then it sticks in your mind. You misspell that word over and over again,
always in the same way, always in the same place.
From that moment on, there is a part of that word that you
automatically misspell. It is that hard part on which you now concentrate.
First, you check over your writing and pick out the misspelled
words. Then you locate the hard part of each of those words the one or
two letters in it that you automatically misspell.
And then you rewrite that word correctly this time
CAPITALIZING those hard letters.
You write it like this:
climB
boRRow
UNable
paraLLel
tomoRRow
arGUMent, and so on.
Now, copy this correct spelling on a second sheet of paper over
and over again with the capitals in exactly the same place that you have
put them.
Write that word over and over and over again capitals and all
until youve got it down pat. Until you can see the correct capitalized
spelling of the hard part of that word with your eyes shut.
Then youve completed your first step. Youre well on your way to
perfect spelling.
STEP TWO: BUILD AN AUTOMATIC MEMORY PROMPTER TO
SPELL THE HARD PART OF THE WORD CORRECTLY
Now, you are going to reinforce that correct picture image of that
word in your mind. You are going to do it by creating a simple spell-alike
to help you remember how the difficult letters go.
your notebook. I suggest that you keep this Spelling Section for your
reading notes and/or home-study courses.
Divide this section into two parts. Title the first part Misspelled
Words, and mark down in it any word you misspell.
Every night take one of these misspelled words no more and
use the system to teach yourself its correct spelling.
Then when you have had that word letter-perfect, list it in the
second part of the Spelling Section under the title Mastered Words.
When you have listed about ten or twelve of these mastered words,
have someone dictate all of them to you in a short paragraph or story.
Then check each of their spellings.
If any are misspelled, put them back in the first part of the Section,
and start all over again, because you havent established the correct habit
yet.
But you will. Before you know it, youll be amazed at the absolute
precision you show in these spelling tests.
And once you have mastered a word, use it as often as possible.
This will help you practice, to keep the confidence show you over and
over again that you no longer have the slightest reason to be afraid of
misspelling that once terrifying word.
IN SUMMARY:
Theres only one permissible way to spell; that is 100 per cent,
letter-perfect.
This can be easily done if you correct every spelling error,
individually, with this simple three-step method:
1. Detect the one or two letters in each difficult word that you
automatically spell wrong. Then CAPITALIZE the correct
spelling of those letters till they stick out in front of your eyes
like a sore thumb.
CHAPTER 14
How to write as easily and quickly as you think
The farther you advance in the business and social world, the more
you will be required to prepare resumes, interoffice memos, engineering
reports, business and social letters, club minutes, and much, much more.
All of this vital work will be written. All of it will require that you
be able to set down your thoughts, suggestions, goals on paper so
clearly and so persuasively that those papers serve as your best salesmen.
Therefore, the ability to write well is equally as important to you as
the ability to speak well. You must be as fluid with your pen as you are
with your tongue. You must be just as much at home writing a technical
report as you are telling a friend about a ball game.
You must develop ease in writing.
Ease in writing, and precision in writing, come from two sources,
both of which area available to you.
1. Practice and
2. Planning
It is the combination of these two that constitute power writing. Let
us see how you can build both of them into your every written word, and
HOW YOU CAN DISCOVER EXACXTLY WHAT TO WRITE FROM
THE BEGINNING TO THE END OF EVERY PAPER.
Like reading, and perhaps even more so, writing demands a plan of
attack, a definite goal that you want to achieve in every composition, and
a definite plan to get there. A series of questions that points you
immediately on the right road, and keeps you there from the first word
you write to the last.
Lets look at such a series of direction questions right now. Lets
work out a typical idea for example, a paper you might prepare for a
magazine article, or a speech before your club and see how these
questions with answers avoid errors, strengthen the power of what you
have to say and cut your writing time in half.
Lets take as our subject Should America Try to Be First to Land a
Man on the Moon? Lets assume that you answer the question with a
Yes, that America should try to land a man on the moon first, and see
how you develop the subject.
First of all, you should ask yourself these questions:
What exactly am I going to write about in this paper?
(About whether America should try to be first to land a man on the
moon.)
Can I express this key idea in a single sentence, before I begin to
write? (Yes. America should be first to land a man on the moon.)
How much am I going to say about it? (Im going to list the
reasons why America should be first.)
What am I NOT going to say about it, because I dont have the
room? (Two things: (1) I am not going to list any arguments for the other
side, why America should not try to be first; and (2) I am not going to
discuss any of the technical problems that well have to overcome to
reach the moon.)
II.
B.
1.
2.
3.
C.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Connecting words are and, yet, but, so, or, for, however, therefore,
thus, otherwise, because, from, such, this and so on. They point out to
your reader what your second sentence has to do with your first, what
your third has to do with your second, and so on.
EXAMPLES: A good exercise would be to go through a few pages
of any good book and underline the connecting words the author uses.
Ask yourself how each connection word ties in one sentence with the
sentence that goes before.
This way, you will develop skill in using these tie-in words, and
your papers will be a powerful procession of closely woven thoughts.
IN SUMMARY:
The ability to write well is as important as the ability to speak well,
and it is as easy to learn.
You should learn and practice the principles of planning from
today on. Before you start to write a word you should already have
defined your subject, your main thoughts, and your opening and closing
sentences.
And you should have arranged them in paragraph order in a Main
Thought Outline, so your paper will practically write itself when you sit
down to begin it.
PART FOUR
Mathematics can be fun, if you do it this way
CHAPTER 15
How anyone can improve his skill in mathematics, even
if he cant add two and two today
2.
3.
CHAPTER 16
The one simple secret of avoiding 20 per cent of all math errors
automatically
It is a proved fact that careless mistakes, sloppy copying, slips of
the pen, and just plain inattention account for approximately 20 per cent
of all errors in mathematics.
Think of this fact for one moment. If you are now bringing home,
say, a 70 on your math papers in night class, or making error after error in
your mathematical computations at work, simply substituting precision
for sloppiness in your work could improve that night class grade
overnight 20 per cent, or 14 points, or bring your work up to an 84 (or
eliminate those careless errors overnight).
One simple change on your part towards neatness accuracy,
precision will make that much difference. Isnt it worth a few minutes
of your time, right now, to learn these three fundamental rules that give
you such startling results overnight?
PRECISION RULE NUMBER ONE: WRITE EACH NUMBER
CORRECTLY
Most people scrawl their numbers rather than write them: 4s look
like 9s, or 7s are mistaken for 3s. Error is built into your work at the
very beginning, and your mathematics is to check each one of the ten
numbers you write down on paper. Every one of those numbers must
stand out clear, without the slightest chance of a mistake, even to a casual
glance.
Make every number as precise as it is on the printed page, and you
have taken a giant step to better math in a few short minutes.
mathematics). Then check each key word with the board to make sure
you have them all, and they all correct. Only then do you begin to work.
4. At the end of your solution, if the answer does not seem logical,
check the problem against the board once again. You may spot a figure
miscopied now that you had overlooked before. And this may save you
precious moments of wrestling to correct a wrong answer whose error
had lain in the very beginning.
IN SUMMARY:
Approximately 2 per cent of all errors in mathematics are made
from pure inaccuracy.
Without absolute precision in every step you make in mathematics,
you are beaten before your mind even begins to work.
You gain this vital precision by learning three simple techniques:
1. To make sharp, clear numbers that cant be mistaken even at a
quick glance.
2. By making ruler-straight columns, with each number precisely in
the right place.
3. By copying the problems exactly photographically with every
number exactly as it is given to you.
Once you have made this habit of precision second nature, you are
then ready to learn how to make abstract problems as plain and as simple
as your own thumb. We now turn to this technique.
CHAPTER 17
How to make abstract mathematical ideas concrete
One of the most difficult parts of mathematics for most people is
the fact that it is abstract, that it deals with ideas that they cannot see or
touch or picture easily in their minds eye.
Therefore these abstract ideas become hard for you to work with,
when they would really be quite easy if you just made them into physical
models that you could see.
This simple rule the construction of physical models will help
you every time you are introduced to new abstract ideas. Otherwise you
will not be able to see or touch or picture them immediately. And you
will have trouble with them for this reason alone.
Therefore, if you wish to feel at home with abstract mathematical
ideas, your first job is to construct physical models of those ideas that
make them easy to work with.
Lets look at some of the most common of these abstract ideas.
Lets see how easy it is to turn them into pictures or models that you can
see and move around, once you are given the key.
Lets start with one of the primary ideas in all mathematical
reasoning yet one that causes most people most trouble throughout their
entire lives.
HOW TO MAKE FRACTION MODELS
A fraction is a part of a whole. This is its word definition, but it is
extremely hard to picture. So lets work with fractions, not only with
words and numbers, but with pictures.
The fraction looks like this:
Now, once you learn the idea of making these fraction pictures,
working with fractions becomes as simple as adding or subtracting
building blocks. Lets take a few examples:
TO ADD FRACTIONS THE PICTURE WAY.
Suppose you are given the problem: Add + +
You immediately draw this picture:
Notice that each is shaded in a different part of the whole box. This
makes adding easier in the final answer.
Of course the answer is now perfectly evident, even at glance. It is:
=
It is as easy as counting blocks. And it remains that easy, even
when you go on to more complicated problems that might otherwise have
given you trouble. Like this
TO REDUCE IMPROPER FRACTIONS THE PICTURE WAY
An improper fraction is a fraction that adds up to more than one,
and should therefore be changed to a whole number and a proper fraction.
For example, you may be given this problem:
Change the improper fraction 9/4 to a mixed number. (A mixed
number is a whole number and a proper fraction, in this case 2 1/4.)
To do the problem, first lay out the 9 fourths, like this:
etc.
1
1
= 2
The answer is as plain as the nose on your face 2 .
Simply a matter of grouping and counting physical units that you can see
and touch.
Of course, you use these physical models only until you understand
fractions so well that they become second nature to you. Then you
automatically drop the models and use the now-mastered abstract idea of
fractions to go on with.
One more example will make this clear.
=
Thus different denominators become as easy to work with as
problems having the same denominators.
But as you grow more at home with fractions, you can forget about
drawing pictures for each problem, and go on the faster way of working
with the different fractions themselves.
To help you do this to help you pictures the relation of many
different denominators at once you use a new model. This time it is a
Denominator Chart, like this:
/
1/8
1/
16
1/8
1/8
1/8
1/8
1/8
1/8
1/8
1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/ 1/
16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16
Notice that you are still working with pictures, but that this picture
is more abstract than the blocks you were using before. Thus you are
moving step by step to mastery of the truly abstract principles of
mathematics, but getting complete understanding and self-confidence
every step of they way.
OTHER MATHEMATICAL MODELS YOU MAY BUILD
Decimals are hard for most people only because they dont realize
that theyve been working with them all their lives, in the form of dollars
and pennies.
A penny is a decimal part of a dollar (one-hundredth). So is a dime
(one-tenth, or $.10). So is a quarter (one-fourth, or $.25. So is a half
dollar (one-half, or $.50).
Train yourself at least at the beginning, to substitute the word
pennies, for decimal points when you begin to solve decimal problems.
Thus the problem What part is .25 of one? becomes What part
is 25 cents is 25 cents of one dollar?, which becomes How many
quarters in a dollar?, which you can answer instantly.
All other decimals problems are equally a cinch, once you think of
them in terms of money.
Percentages are just multiplying by pennies. A percentage point is
nothing more than a decimal point with the period in front of it removed
and the per-cent symbol (%) placed after it. Thus 10% is equal to .10.
And you already know that .10 equals $.10 or .10c.
Thus 10% = .10 = $.10 = 10c.
Percentages are used to multiply other numbers by. If you want to
find 25% of 100, you multiply 100 by 25%, or .25, or have a bankruptcy
sale where youre only going to get 25c on the dollar. Thus 25% of 100
is 25.
This image of a bankruptcy sale makes percentages quite easy to
do, for the simple reason that it turns the abstract idea of percentages
into physical dollars and cents. Try it for a while. The results may amaze
you.
Algebra may be thought of as a game a series of riddles in which
someone hides a number and you have to find it.
The number thats hidden is replaced by a letter of the alphabet.
For example, x = 2 + 3. To find x, you simply add 2 + 3.
The puzzles get harder as the game goes along, but the rules are
still the same. Letters are substituted for numbers, and you have to
rearrange them, step by step, to find the numbers.
Thought of in this way, algebra becomes quite simple and quite a
lot of fun.
Geometry was invented to solve physical problems engineering
problems, building problems, farm problems. Later, it lost this solid
nature and became quite abstract. Your job is to, make it physical again.
You do this by building models. Triangles made of matchsticks. Circles
made of string. Rubber balls serving as spheres. Physical objects that you
can measure, open and close, compare one with the other.
This is especially important in solid geometry, where it is
practically impossible for you to understand the course without physical
models. Here, five minutes spent taking apart and putting together a
plastic model of, say, a cylinder will be worth two hours of abstract book
study.
IN SUMMARY:
Some of the most important ideas in mathematics are abstract
extremely difficult for you to see or touch or picture in your mind clearly.
Because they are abstract, these ideas are hard for you to work with
until you make them solid and real.
They is done by building physical models of those ideas. This
chapter has listed several physical models that you can easily make.
These models help you grasp the fundamental idea easily and
quickly. Later on, when it has become second nature to you, you will no
longer need the model, and will be able to work directly with abstract
idea itself.
Now we show you how to apply almost the same technique to
break down complicated problems into a series of simple, easy-to-do
steps.
CHAPTER 18
How to make complicated problems half-solve themselves
So far in this section we have concentrated on the fundamental
skills of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. You must
master these first before you can go on to any form of more advanced
mathematics.
However, if you pursue a business or engineering or scientific
career, you will, of course, be presented with far more complicated
problems.
Problems that involve as many as a dozen or two dozen individual
steps.
Problems that are given to you out of order, and must be rearranged
before you can even begin to solve them.
In this case, they are simply that your company makes $500 on
every ton of paper, and you have an order for 46,000 pounds.
STEP THREE: ASK, WHAT IS GIVEN?
Now, when you have understood the problem completely and
marked the key facts, you ask yourself, What is given? What does this
problem tell me? What are the facts I have to start with?
In this case, they are simply that your company makes $500 on
every ton of paper, and you have an order for 46,000 pounds.
STEP THREE: ASK, WHAT ANSWER IS CALLED FOR?
In this case, How much profit will my company make on the order
for 46,000 pounds.
STEP FOUR: ASK, IS THERE A HIDDEN QUESTION IN
THIS PROBLEM? IF SO, WHAT IS IT?
In this case, the answer is yes, there is a hidden question. It is, How
many tons in 46,000 pounds of paper?
STEP FIVE: ASK, HOW MANY STEPS DO I NEED TO
SOLVE THIS PROBLEM?
Now you decide how many little problems there are in this big
problem.
In case there are two:
1. Finding out how many tons there are in 46,000 pounds.
2. Finding out how much profit you make from this figure,
when one ton is worth $500 profit to your company.
STEP SIX: FIND OUT WHETHER TO ADD, SUBTRACT,
MULTIPLY, OR DIVIDE IN EACH STEP.
In Step 1, you must divide one ton (2,000 pounds) into 46,000
pounds, to get the number of tons.
In this case:
23____
2000 | 46,000
40
6
6
500
x23
1500
1000
11500
500
23| 11,500
115
To check Step 1:
2000
x 23
46,000
You now have your right answer, and you know that answer is
right. Make sure you follow this simple procedure for every word
problem you encounter, and youll be amazed at how easy they all
become.
HOW TO TURN HOPELESS PROBLEMS INTO SNAPS
Word problems are one of the two great bogeymen of advanced
mathematics. The other terror is the long, complicated problem involving
half a dozen to a dozen steps.
Most people freeze up when given an involved problem that
doesnt resolve itself into a simple, easy answer, or that takes a long
series of steps.
But these problems are just as easy as 2 + 2 = 4, if you only work
them out one step at a time, and write down each of the answers.
The secret is simple: hard, complicated problems are just a lot of
easy problems strung together.
Therefore the trick in getting them right every time is simply this:
See that these problems are a series of simple, easy steps.
Do these problems one step after another, each in its proper order,
and each written down on your paper.
The procedure is simple. The problem is broken down into a series
of steps. Each step is taken in turn, and written down on the work paper.
No step, no matter how simple, may be omitted. No step may be done in
your head, or placed on another sheet of paper.
Each step is written out, solved, and the solution used to help solve
the next step in its turn.
This way, you eliminate the three major non-technical sources of
error throughout your entire use of higher mathematics.
1. You dont take crazy short-cuts that trip you up in a dozen
different ways.
2. You, dont strive for quick, done-in-the-head answers that
arent thought through.
3. You concentrate on the PROCEDURE by which you get the
answer, and not on the answer itself, which comes automatically
out of that procedure.
IN MATHEMATICS, METHOD IS THE KEY TO SUCCESS
In mathematics, strange as it may seem at first glance, the correct
answers are not nearly as important as the way you arrive at them.
The means the methods the procedures you learn in your math
studies are the real treasures you carry away with you into later life.
Individual problems and answers come and go. But the correct
procedures will continue to give thousands of correct answers, all the rest
of your life.
Therefore the great value of a correct answer is simply that it
shows you that you know how to use the correct procedure.
Try to acquire mastery of method. This leads your mind away from
fruitless copying of correct answers. It focuses your attention on getting
the procedure right away, so that it can automatically give you the correct
answers every time.
WHAT TO DO IF A PROBLEM HAS YOU STOPPED COLD
One last hint. Everyone, no matter how bright, runs into a problem
from time to time that just stumps him. In this case, there is a simple
procedure that may break that roadblock immediately. Here it is:
1. Read it again from the very start. Look especially for clue that you
may have missed before. It may even be helpful to rewrite the
problem again on a fresh sheet of paper.
2. Go over your steps. A simple error in addition may have thrown
off.
3. Try substituting simpler numbers for those given in the problem. If
it is a problem in algebra, try restating it in arithmetical numbers.
This may make it simple enough that you can see the correct
procedures you should follow at a glance.
4. Go on to the next problem for a moment. This may supply the
needed mental connection.
5. Leave the problem for the night. Then perhaps you can solve it the
next morning when your mind is fresh, and youve had a chance to
absorb the procedure.
6. Look up a similar problem or procedure in another book. Perhaps a
new authors way of explaining the problem will make it clear to
you.
7. If nothing else works, be sure to discuss the problem with your
teacher (or someone who knows the work) the next day. Then do
the problem again to make certain you now understand it
completely. Follow the Golden Error procedure outlined in the next
chapter.
IN SUMMARY:
Complicated math problems are made simple in these two ways:
If it is a word problem, by following this nine-step procedure:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
PART FIVE
Mastering facts the art of remembering and review
CHAPTER 19
Errors the royal road to knowledge
Every person, no matter how bright or slow he is, learns some facts
quickly and has trouble with others.
Those he learns easily require little outside help. It is the
troublesome fact, the error-causing fact, the fact that blocks the road to
understanding that we must concentrate upon.
The telltale symptom of trouble, of course, is a mistake in your
work. Most people are troubled by such mistakes. They do not realize that
if they are handled correctly, they are worth their weight in gold.
If you get it right again, then you can forget about it. If not, do it
again. Never allow yourself to make the same mistake twice!
STEP FIVE: DO SIMILAR PROBLEMS TO MAKE SURE YOUVE
GOT THE CORRECT TECHNIQUE
At the same time, give yourself several other mark-up problems.
Concentrate on them. Within a short time youll have mastered them all,
and the correct answers will flow from your pen, with perfect confidence.
IN SUMMARY:
Follow this same technique with every mistake you make.
Break the problem down into steps.
See which step went wrong.
Find out why.
Correct the cause of the error.
Work the problem the right way.
And keep doing it over and over again until the right answer is
absolutely automatic.
This way mistakes help rather than harm you. You wont make that
mistake or its first cousin again. You have removed a
misunderstanding-roadblock from your mind.
This process of turning errors into achievements is one of the finest
forms of review. We now turn to a complete discussion of this allimportant subject.
CHAPTER 20
How to burn facts, lessons, whole subjects into your mind for good
We are now ready to review what you have learned so far in this
book, and tie it together into one over-all plan for mastering any subject
you may study.
Mastering a course any course consists of the following logical
steps:
Are all these facts really important are they really main thoughts
or are some of them merely details describing other main thoughts
already picked up from another source? If so, leave them out.
These questions cause you to weigh and choose and reject. They make
your mind work. In themselves, they are an excellent form of review.
And when you are finished answering them, and shaping their answers
into a final main thought chapter outline, you will pretty well know
everything there is to know about the material in that chapter.
SECOND:
Now, go back over your lecture notes for that chapter, and ask
yourself the following questions:
What questions will I be most likely asked about this chapter?
What points have been stressed in classroom lectures?
What information were we told to pay special attention to in the
textbook?
Every time you find the answer to one of these questions in your
lecture notes, place a red check in front of that point in your revised
main-thought outline. This check will serve as a signal to you when you
compose your final review questions, as we will describe below.
Now throw away your reading notes, lecture notes, and reference
notes.
You have no more need for them, since they have been blended into
your revised main-thought outlines.
THIRD:
Now turn to the fundamental-vocabulary page. Remove this page from
your notebook and lay it alongside your revised main-thought outline for
the course.
Go down the vocabulary, word by word, and check off the point in the
main-thought outlines where that word is first used in the course. At that
point, make an asterisk (*) in the main-thought outline, and then write the
word and its definition at the bottom of that outline page.
Do this till you have exhausted every word you have in the
fundamental vocabulary. You have then tied the vocabulary in with your
notes, and gained a deeper understanding of both in doing it.
But do not throw away the fundamental-vocabulary page. Continue to
carry it at the back of the notebook as an instant reference if you should
forget the meaning of the words as they appear in more advanced lessons.
FOURTH:
Now take out your daily or weekly written work, and check each one
of the mistakes you have made during the entire course.
Wherever you have made a mistake, place a red check mark against
the same point in your main-thought outlines. This again reminds you to
pay special attention to that point in your final review.
You now have a completely revised and ready-for-review notebook. It
contains every fact you have learned from your reading, your lectures and
your reference research, all blended together into one thoroughly
understood stream of thought.
In addition, you have incorporated into those outlines probable test
questions, a thorough understanding of the vocabulary of the course, and
review signals for every weak spot that has shown up in your work for the
entire term.
You are now ready to perform one final review operation on that
notebook, which will thoroughly prepare you for your final test by
enabling you to anticipate 80 per cent or more of all the questions your
teacher can give you, IN THE EXACT FORM THAT TEACHER CAN
PHRASE THEM.
STEP THREE: THE FINAL QUIZ-REVIEW OF THE ENTIRE
COURSE
Let us say that you have begun your final revision of your notebook
two weeks before the final exam. It has taken you one week to complete
this revision, and thus to master the main thoughts of the entire course.
You now have one week left to prepare yourself to breeze through that
final exam. In the next chapter we will outline day-by-day, step-by-step
procedures for that final week. Right now, however, we will see how you
take your revised notes during that final week, and turn them into your
own private test before the real test, to make sure you know every detail
of that material.
There are two reasons, of course, why you take this private test before
the real test:
1.
2.
Therefore you now begin to turn your revised notes into test questions,
in this way:
HOW TO MAKE UP YOUR OWN TEST QUESTIONS
As we mentioned in Chapter 10, page 90, each page of your notes is
written on one side only. You have purposely left the opposite of those
notes blank. You are now going to put that blank side to work.
Let us say that you are going to review our sample chapter 3, The Five
Roads to Cost Reduction. You have already revised your outline notes, to
include both text and lecture ideas into one over-all outline.
You now turn that sheet of paper over and write across the top of the
blank side: The Five Roads to Cost Reduction Test Questions.
You are now ready to make up your questions. In doing this you must
remember that, in your final exam, you will be given two general types of
questions.
First, the Short-Answer questions, such as multiple choice, true-false,
fill-in, and so on.
|
Answers
|
1.
|
2.
|
3.
|
4.
|
etc.
|
|
____________________________|___________________________
|
Essay Questions
|
Answers
1.
|
2.
|
3.
|
4.
|
etc
|
|
|
You are now ready to compose your questions.
HOW TO MAKE UP SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS
familiar with each one of these question types, as they apply to the
material you will be tested on.
You even use the same procedure to make sure you know the exact
meaning of each of the words in your fundamental vocabulary. For
example, suppose you want to be absolutely certain of the meaning of
Operations Research. To test yourself on this point, construct the
following question:
OPERATIONS RESEARCH means most nearly: a) Cost
Accounting; b) Statistical Decision Making; C) Computer Planning; d)
Time and Motion Study.
The answer is c. But the construction of such a question forces you
to think deeply about the meaning of this new word, to compare and
contrast it with the other new terms you have learned in this course, and
to dig deeper into more and more profitable levels of understanding.
HOW TO MAKE UP ESSAY QUESTIONS
The same procedure holds true on preparing your Essay Questions.
First go over the important points stressed by your teacher. Then the
points you have been confused on before. Then whatever other ideas you
believe that you will be tested on in your final exam.
For each of these prepare an essay-type question, such as those
described in Chapter 23.
For example, on manufacturing costs, a simple essay type
questions would be this:
List five ways to cut manufacturing costs.
Or, as a more complicated essay-type question:
You have just been appointed sales manager of the ABC Company
Describe five ways that you would attempt to cut their sales costs, in
order, and tell why you think each if these ways would be effective.
HOW TO ANSWER ESSAY-TYPE QUESTIONS ON YOUR SELFQUIZ PAPER
When you have written all your questions both short answer and
essay type- down the left-hand side of your paper, you are ready to take
your own quiz and write the answers.
You do not do this the same day that you composed the questions.
Wait a day, and then come back to the quiz.
Without looking at your notes, write the answer completely. For
the essay-type questions, however, do not write a complete answer.
Instead, outline as you would do in a actual test.
You are only trying to develop the main ideas for your answer, and
the order in which you would arrange them. Once you have this, you can
be satisfied, and go on to the next question.
For example, in the essay question two, about the sales manger
position described on the last page, you would outline your answer in this
way:
Way To Cut Cost
1. Advertising
2. Warehousing
3. Transportation
4. New Specialists
Reason Why
1. Biggest cost today
2. Greatest per-cent improvement
3. Big waste in most cos
4. May be cut entirely
If you miss it again, reread your notes, and then turn back to the
original textbook material and reread it again. If you still do not
understand it after this rereading immediately speak to your teacher about
it, going over it with him until you are absolutely sure of it.
Remember your goal is to make certain that you understand every
important idea in the course well enough to allow you to answer any
questions on it that can be thrown at you. You can accept nothing less.
WHAT THESE SELF-QUIZZES WILL DO FOR YOU
If you have done them correctly, when you are through with these
self-quizzes, you have accomplished the dream of every person who has
ever walked down a classroom aisle to take a final exam:
You will actually know the examination question in advance!
You see, you teacher, in preparing his final tests, his no more
material to choose from than you. Both you and your teacher will have to
concentrate on the same broad ideas and important details as the sources
for your test material.
Therefore, to a surprisingly large extent, you both must come up
with exactly the same questions.
Think of the thrill you will get when you march into the final exam
and find dozens of the same exact test questions waiting there for you
with the correct answers perfectly stored away in your head, ready to
spring onto the paper.
Think of the head start this will give you over more poorly
prepared classmates. Think of the tremendous burst of confidence this
will raise in you to completely erase any nervousness you might have
brought into the room with you, carry you through every question on the
test, with your mind already revved up to full working power, pulling out
correct answers as fast as you can write them down on the page.
Isnt this a wonderful gift to give yourself, for only a few
disciplined minutes each day, the final week before you take that test?
IN SUMMARY:
PART SIX
How to breeze though test
CHAPTER 21
The week before the test what to do and what not to do
The final goal of all your planning all your work, learning and
relearning and review is one or two or three hours in a closed room,
proving your accomplishment, in the educational ritual called the test,
which separates the winners from the losers.
Some people object to tests as unfair, anxiety causing, and not
really proving anything. This is untrue. Life is a series of tests. Some are
written, some are verbal, some are economic or social or moral.
In any case, you had better get used to passing all of them now.
The winners circle is an entirely different world from the habitat of the
also-ran.
THE FIRST GREAT STEP IN IMPROVING ANYONES TEST
GRADES
Test performance can be improved, just as performance in any
competitive activity can be improved. And as in developing any other
skill, the two magic ingredients are:
1. Knowledge, and
2. Practice.
And as in any other form of pay-off competition, there is always
one great enemy to face and overcome: fear.
Fear destroys people in tests, just as fear can destroy people in
business or social life. The person who tenses up, panics, loses all his
carefully stored information the moment he faces the test paper, is beaten
before he even tries.
Therefore the first step in preparing yourself to master any kind of
examination is to always ask this question:
What causes fear in a test situation?
The answer is twofold:
1. Not knowing the material upon which you will be tested.
2. Not knowing the forms and procedures by which you will be
tested.
Either one of these two test fears can knock you right out of a top
grade. They can cause a performance 30 per cent to 50 per cent less than
you are really capable of giving.
You must prevent this loss. But how?
Quite simply, really, in these three tested and proved ways:
1. Preparation.
2. Familiarity.
3. Practice.
Lets discuss each of them in turn:
First, of course, preparation. Knowing the material of your
course. Knowing it backward and forward. Boiling it down into its
main ideas; arranging those main ideas in the right logical order so
that one automatically suggests another; and filing those ideas
away in your mind so permanently that they spring to your tongue
or hand the very instant you need them.
This preparation for the final exam begins the very first day
you open your book. This book has been a step-by-step blueprint
on how to conduct that preparation, how to make it as thorough as
possible, and how to make it instantly available again, at the
moment of pay-off.
FAMILIARITY BREEDS CONTEMPT WITH TESTS AS
WELL AS PEOPLE
Second, after you have mastered the content of your course,
you must then equally master the forms by which you will be
questioned about it.
Tests rattle people by their very appearance. The sight of a
strange new way to ask a question can cause a person to miss an
answer that he knows perfectly well. Questions, as every student
knows, can be tricky. Your job is to take the trickery out of them
before you encounter them in the test room.
This demands that you sit down and learn, one by one, the
types of questions you will be asked in your exams. You learn how
these questions are built, how to read them, what you must do to
solve them, and how they themselves can help you solve them.
Then you go over the same type of question two, three, four
or more times, until you are as familiar with way to work out the
answer to that question, as you are with the way to write your own
name.
Your goal is simple. You must make absolutely certain that
you are never confronted with a type or form of question that you
have never seen before.
The moment you glance at that question, its form must be so
familiar to you that you know automatically, without a second
thought, the procedure by which you will answer it. You must be
able to concentrate instantly on the content of that question, to
devote your full energies to retrieving of that question a second
thought.
This is what the next two chapters will do for you. First, they
will give you every type of short-answer question now in popular
use. Then every type of essay question.
They will build into your test-taking personality familiarity
your second great weapon against fear.
PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT PERFECT KNOWLEDGE,
PERFECT CONFIDENCE
Third, and finally, once you know the course material, and once
you know the form or type of questions youre going to be asked about it,
then you out the two together in constant, continuous practice.
With the system we have taught you in these pages you will
actually be taking tests from the very first day you open a new book. You
will test yourself every single night in your nightly review, with every tiein talk you have each morning, every weekly review you finish each
Friday.
Every time you do a problem in mathematics, you test yourself.
Every time you correct an error in your homework you retest yourself.
You can devote the third hour a day later to taking this elf-exam,
checking your weak points, reviewing the material that will deepen your
understanding of them, and marking each still-troublesome idea for one
last review the next day.
FINAL HOUR OF PREPARATION PREFERABLY WITH A
FRIEND
You are now ready for your last self-exam. You will take it on this
basis:
What you have done up to this point has been a process of
condensation, of boiling down the material of each course in two ways:
First, to its main thoughts, its backbone meaning, its important
ideas that you must be tested upon.
Second, to each one of these main ideas that is particularly hard for
you. That you do not quite understand. That you cannot answer as quickly
and accurately as you can all the others.
Throughout your hours of self-examination, you have gradually
mastered and pout aside those important ideas that you thoroughly
understand. In your two weeks of the final review, you first refreshed
your memory on these well-known facts, and then tested your ability to
recall them easily and completely.
Now put aside. You know that you can answer any test question
about them.
This leaves you, in this last hour of review, face to face with your
own particular trouble-makers.
These are the facts upon which you are vague. The problems you
cannot solve automatically. The questions that might trip you up without
this one final hour of mastery.
Now you attack them directly, in every form, shape, and way that
you can think of.
If possible, you should have some other member of the family with
you in this final hour of mastery. Their job here is that of question-asker.
They should take every one of those trouble-makers in turn, and invent
five, six, seven different approaches, different questions to sharpen your
mind about them.
For example, they might take the final trouble-maker, and first ask
a true-false question about it. Then switch to a multiple-answer question.
Then to cross-out question. Then to a comparison-contrast question.
Let them ask as many questions as they think up about that one
trouble-maker. And keep asking till the right answer becomes automatic
on your lips. Then go on to the next trouble-maker and do the same.
Of course, familiarity with the subject matter will greatly aid this
final, intensive quiz. Therefore, for at least this last hour, it is advisable
that you review this material with another person who is attending the
same class, or taking the same course.
Let us assume that both have prepared your own final exams in
approximately the same way described above. In this case you both have
prepared your own self-quiz on the same material.
But no two minds think alike, and one may have picked some vital
point that the other has neglected. Therefore, for the first half hour of this
last review hour, let each of you give the other his own quiz.
This should be done orally. Fast. With the answers springing from
your lips almost the instant the questions are finished.
Many of the questions you will have already anticipated, phrased
almost exactly the same. Realizing this will give your confidence a huge
boost.
Other questions will be slight rephrases, or on different points than
you might have stressed. This will give you a chance to pull the material
out of your mind, to become accustomed to turning questions into
answers automatically.
When the quizzes are over, each of you then turns to his own
trouble-makers. You intensively quiz each other on just these points.
Discuss your answers. The two points of view merge. New insights are
gained by both of you.
This may be the final push that leads you to absolute understanding
of a point that has been bothering you since the beginning of the course,
so you can now file it away and forget it.
HOW TO MAKE SURE YOU REMEMBER YOUR MEMORY WORK
WHEN YOU GO INTO THE EXAMINATION ROOM
In addition to this backbone meaning of your course, you will be
confronted from time to time with other facts, equally as important,
which you must memorize exactly, detail for detail. These may be
mathematical formulas, history dates, equations in chemistry or physics,
and so on.
With such facts, your problem is one of sheer memorization. You
must have them engraved on your memory by the time you walk into the
exam room. You can do this most easily by following the following
procedure:
1. Buy a packet of 5 by 8-inch library cards that fit into your
pocket. Each formula you want to memorize you write down
exactly on one of these cards. Use a separate card for each
formula you wish to retain.
2. On the front of each card write down the name of the formula.
For example, you might write on the front of one card:
To find the area of a circle.
3.
On the back of the card, write the formula itself. For example:
A=R2
4. Carry these cards with you for a few days. Whenever you have a
spare moment, pull them out, look at the identifying name on the
front and try to recite the exact formula from memory. Then turn
the card over to see if you are correct.
5. When you have repeated the corrected formula three times from
memory, take the card and file it away till the week before the
final test. If you cannot repeat it three times from memory,
continue in this way:
6. The final week before the test, each night take each of the
difficult formulas and lay them in a pile, face up on your study
table. Read their names one by one, and then write down their
IN SUMMARY:
There are three simple secrets to achieving the absolute top grades
in any test you will ever take.
1. Preparation to master the content of the course.
2. Familiarity with the types of questions that you will be asked.
3. Practice to combine this content and form into a flawless routine
of instant-precision answers.
After a final week of such practice, you should be able to walk into
your examination room with complete self-assurance.
To help you do this, we now examine the type of questions you will be
asked, and how you can avoid any pitfalls they any present to you.
CHAPTER 22
Types of short-answer tests and how to master them
The most frequent type of test you will encounter is the objective
or short-answer or write-in test.
Such tests and there are at least ten different forms of them
present a series of short questions and then ask you to give a short answer
to each. Often this answer is no more than a single word, a yes or a no, or
a check mark in the proper space.
Thus these short-answer tests require no writing skill on your part.
During the entire test you may not write a single sentence.
Because of this, many people falsely believe that these write-in
tests are nothing but measurements of memory, that they do not require
you to think, and that the person with the strongest memory is the person
who will score the highest on such tests.
Nothing could be further from the truth. A working knowledge of
the facts memorization is only the first step required to score top
marks on such short-answer tests. Assuming that you are thoroughly
Only if all the key facts are correct can the statement be true.
WHAT TO WATCH OUT FOR
In a true-false test you should always be suspicious of flat
statements that allow no exceptions. They are probably false. Tips-offs
include such words as:
All
Always
No
None
None
Every
Never
Invariably
Any
Absolutely
d.
Now, once you have anticipated what you believe is the correct
answer, you must make absolutely sure that you are right. You do this by
a process of checking and elimination.
To begin this check, you now read every possible answer on the
list.
(For example, in example 2 above, you go on to read:
3. Does most of his reviewing just prior to an examination.
And also read:
4. Does not make notations in his textbook.)
STEP THREE: ELIMINATE THE WRONG ANSWERS
Now, as you read each of these other possible answers, you
eliminate them one by one as being incorrect. Only when you have
rejected all other answers except the correct one - only when you have
proved to yourself that they are wrong can you be certain that your
choice is absolutely right.
To do this, you must give yourself a reason why each rejected
answer is wrong. Lets see how you do this in example 2 above:
1. Studies with the radio volume lowered.
You immediately reject this answer as wrong, because the good student
does not have the radio on when he studies at all. You then read:
3.Does most of his reviewing is a continuous process, starting the first
day of study. And then you finish the list by reading:
4. Does not make notations in his textbook.
Which is again wrong because the good student will underline in his
textbook the essence of each chapter before he transfers that essence to
his notebook.
You have now cross-checked your answer. You have anticipated
the one correct answer; you have read all the others; and you have
rejected them as wrong. You are now sure you are right.
STEP FOUR: MARK DOWN THE CORRECT ANSWER
You then mark down this correct answer, and go one to the next
question.
HOW YOU CAN MAKLE A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTION HELP
YOU FIND THE CORRECT ANSWER IF YOURE NOT SURE OF IT
YOURSELF
If you are well prepared, the technique outlined above will make
you absolutely certain that you absolutely certain that you have the
correct answer to over 90 per cent of all multiple-choice questions.
However, there will always be a question or two in every test
where you are not sure of the correct answer. You may be confused; you
may have temporarily forgotten it; you may need just a slight nudge to
regain it again.
In this case, the question itself may help you clear up this
confusion and point the way to the correct answer. Lets examine some of
the techniques by which you can use the structure of make-up of that
question to help you find the correct answer.
ELIMINATE THE WRONG ANSWERS FIRST
In most multiple-choice questions, you may not be sure which of
the possible answers is correct, but you probably can tell that some of
them are definitely wrong. In this case, since it is easier to choose among
two answers that you know are wrong.
(For example, in 4 above, you may be confused between whether
IMPSTURE is A: an excessive burden or C: a fraud. But you are sure that
it is not B: a stooping position or D: a handicap. So you eliminate thee
two possibilities, and thus focus your attention on the two remaining
possibilities, to which you now apply the following techniques.
REPRASE THE QUESTION
Often the memory-prod you need to come up with the right answer
can be furnished by rephrasing the question. By turning a positive
question into a negative one, by turning a noun asked for into a verb, or
any other way of gaining a new slant on the question.
A. Frankfort
B. Pierre
C. Omaha
D. Sacramento
E. Carson City
HOW TO MASTER IT
Again, elimination of known answers is the key. There are two
quick methods of doing this:
1. Run light pencil lines between those items on the first and second
lists that you are absolutely sure of.
2. Cross off an item in the second list as soon as you mark its letter on
the first list.
In this way you eliminate the sure answers first and are able to
concentrate your attention on the one or two remaining items that needs
more prodding without being confused.
Here again, you must remember that tests also teach. They give
information as well as demand it. Many clues are contained in a matching
question that will help you pull out the correct answer.
For example, in the question above, you may not know that Carson
City is the capital of Nevada, but you may know that it is a city in that
state. The mere fact that it is mentioned in a list of state capitals then tells
you all you need to know to answer the question correctly.
TYPE OF SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION 7: CROSS OUT
DEFINITION: A cross-out question is one that asks you to
eliminate the wrong item in a series. For example:
WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE: Cross out the numbers that do not being
in the following series:
5 10 20 40 50 60 80 160 320
HOW TO MASTER IT
Cross-out questions are difficult for most students because they are
really two-part questions and must be done one part at a time. If you try
to do both parts at the same time, or just plunge hopelessly into question
an organized technique, you will become immediately lost.
This number is 80. Here the pattern takes over again. You have
expected 80, and found it. This indicates that both 50 and 60 were wrong
numbers and should be crossed out.
But, to make certain, you still have two remaining number to check
out the problem. You now test each of them.
The next number is 160. The number 80doubled is 160.
The pattern fits.
The next number is 320. The number 160 doubled is 320. Again
the pattern fits.
You are now certain that 50 and 60 are the wrong numbers. You
cross them out and go on to the next question.
This same two-part technique will be used to solve the terror of
test-rooms, which is:
TYPE OF SHORT_ANSWER QUESTION 8: NUMBER SERIES
DEFINITION: The number-series question presents you with a
series of numbers again, but this time all are correct, and you are required
to write down the next one or two numbers at the end of the series.
WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE: A number-series question is usually
presented in groups, starting with easy ones, and ending up with the very
difficult. Here is a sample you might find on any mathematical-aptitude
test:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
5 9 13 17 21 25 29 - 40 30 20 10
6 18 54 162 486 - 7 10 14 15 18 22 23
3 7 5 9 7 11 9 - 12 8 9 14 6 20 3
2 4 8 3 9 27 4 - HOW TO MASTER IT
X3
X3
X3
6----18----54----162----486
The answers thus become 1,458 and 4,374. But, in example 4, the
pattern becomes more complicated. In examples 1,2 and 3, the same
pattern held for every number in the series. In example 1, the pattern +4
held for every number. In example 2, the pattern -10 held for every
number. And in example 3, the pattern x3 held for every number.
But in example 4, no one pattern holds throughout the series. The
pattern between the first two minutes looks like this:
+3
7----10
The pattern between the second two numbers emerges like this:
+3 +4
7----10----14
And the pattern between the third two numbers looks like this:
+3 +4 +1
7----10----14----15
So far there is no relation between these two-number patterns. But in the
next two numbers, this pattern emerges:
+3 +4 +1 +3 +4
7----10----14----15----18----22
It is, of course. And the final number should then be 23, to give this final
look to the problem.
+3 +4 +1 +3 +4 +1
7----10----14----15----18----22----23
The overall pattern has now emerged. It is a repeat of +3 +4 +1.
Therefore, it is obvious that the next number in the series, the final
answer, is obtained by adding 3 to 23 to get 26.
What you have encountered here is a pattern composed of three
different numbers, all of which are added in rotation to the numbers that
occur in the series.
This new pattern is more complicated then the patterns in the first
three examples, each of which are added in rotation to the number (4, 10
and 3, and one operation (addition, subtraction, and multiplication).
Example 4, however, though it had only one operation (addition)
had three numbers.
Now, what happen if you were given a number series with two
operations and two numbers?
This example 5. Writing in the pattern, you get this:
+4 -2 +4 -2 +4 -2
3----7----5----9----7----11----9--The answer becomes obvious at once. Adding 4 to 9, you get 13.
And subtracting 2 from 13, you get 11.
In a number series, there can be any number of operations and any
number of numbers to perform them on.
But number series can get even more complicated. Take example
6. Marking in our single pattern, we get this:
-4 +1 +5 -8 +14 -17
12----8----9----14----6----20-----3
The first system, of course, will be your results in exams you are
given for a better job, more pay, advanced degree, and all the others we
have mentioned.
The second system of grading you will be your results in the I.Q
tests you will be given from time tom time. For example, as a routine
measure by large companies when you apply for a new job with them.
There is nothing mysterious or Godlike or absolutely final about an
I.Q test. It is just another kind of test. What it measured is not really your
innate intelligences, but simply your ability to pass this type of test.
Therefore, as in other test, your grades can be improved by
planning and practice. And, since this probably the most important single
test you will ever take in your career, let us right now examine each one
of the types of questions you will encounter on it, and how you can
improve your performance on them:
1. Synonyms. Select the word which means the same.
Sample:
BABY: 1. son 2. child; 3. sister; 4. born.
Technique:
1. Think of our synonym before you read the list. 2. Read the
entire list, crossing out wrong possibilities, and matching your
answer to the answer to the answer on the list.
2. Antonyms. Select the word which means the opposite.
Sample:
Back: 1. side; 2. front; 3.top.
Technique:
1. Think of our synonym before you read the list. 2. Think of the
word that means exactly the opposite. 3. Read the entire answer
list to find this word and cross out the others.
3. Classification. Verbal cross-outs. Cross out the word that does
not belong with the others.
Sample:
A. daisy; B. rose; C. cat; D. lily
Technique:
Sample:
Gun is to shoot as knife is to: A. fly; B. meat; C. hurt; D. cut; E.
hit.
Technique:
Again, use two steps. 1 Define the relation between the two given
objects, and write it down. 2. Find the same relation between one of the
possible answers, eliminating each of the others as you read it.
7. Proverbs. A kind of analogy. Given a famous proverb, find
another statement among those furnished which means the same
or most nearly the same.
Sample:
DO NOT HANG ALL ON ONE NAIL.
A. Dont count your chickens until theyre hatched.
B. Dont put all your eggs in one basket.
C. Dont use a nail, use a hanger.
Technique:
1. After reading the given proverb, before you read the answer list,
try to rephrase it in more general terms (for instance, in this
sample, try: Dont risk all on one chance).
2. Read each of the possibilities, to find the one that matches your
own rephrasing.
These, then, are the seven most types of questions given on I.Q
tests. To get the top possible grades you are capable of getting on
these tests, go over these types of questions again and again. Make up
new examples. Be sure you can use the right technique on each of
them as easily as you can write your own name.
IN SUMMARY:
You will encounter these ten types of short-answer question on
your tests:
True- false.
Multiple-choice.
Completion.
Matching.
Enumeration.
Analogies.
Number series.
Cross out.
Sequence.
Combinations.
CHAPTER 23
How to master the essay test
The second great category of test that you will have to deal with in
the examination room is the essay test.
The essay test requires you to write. It confronts you with a
question, or a series of questions, that demand lengthy, organized answers
that may take up a full written page or more.
It tests you ability to:
1. Organize your ideas, and
2. Express them clearly and logically on paper.
Therefore, on the essay test, you are graded on tow
accomplishments:
1. What you say and
2. How you say it.
Let us see how to get better grades in both these areas.
THE BASIC STRATEGY IN TAKING AN ESSAY TEST
We will, of course, assume that you have prepared for the test in
the manner outlined in this book. In other words, that you have absorbed
and organized the material, arranged it in notes, reviewed the note to
eliminate any misunderstandings, and, above all, quizzed yourself on the
information in those notes by creating and answering a series of essaytype questions of your own.
Because of this preparation, then, when you enter the exam room
you are ready, not only with thoroughly organized material, but with
some of the very questions that you will be asked on the test.
First it is outlined.
Then it is written.
The outline is easily as important as the final written answer. It is
in this outline that you build the idea backbone of your answer. That you
organize the thoughts that you will later put sentences.
Therefore, for each answer you should take about one fifth of your
time to outline the answer, and the rest to write it out on the basis of that
outline.
For example, four minutes to outline your answer and sixteen
minutes of guided writing will give you a far better grade than a mere
twenty minutes of blind writing. And the organization of your thought
will shines right through.
And, above all, this way you wont write yourself into a corner,
where you find youre just beginning to answer the question when the
exam time is almost over.
Now, lets take a look at some of the essay questions you will be
required to answer, and what you must do to get each of them precisely
right.
THE KEY ESSAY-QUESTION WORDS, AND HOW TO ANSWER
EACH OF THEM CORRECTLY
KEY WORD:
1. Evalute
SAMPLE QUESTION:
Evaluate the concept of over learning as a sound study
procedure.
WHAT TO DO TO ANSWER IT CORRECTLY:
An evaluation is an appraisal, a weighing of pros and cons.
Therefore your answer should cite the advantages and
disadvantages of the subject being discussed, and end with your
opinion of its worth.
KEY WORD:
2. Summarize
SAMPLE QUESTION:
Name three factors that are basic to success in the stock market.
WHAT TO DO TO ANSWER IT CORRECTLY:
This is the easiest and shortest of all essay questions. Simply name
the subjects asked for, without further detail.
KEYWORD:
7.Discuss.
SAMPLE QUESTION:
Discuss something is to examine it from all angles. Therefore you
should give the complete story of the subject asked for, from its
beginning to its end.
KEYWORD:
8. Outline.
SAMPLE QUESTION:
Outline the principal steps in preparing a sales report.
WHAT TO DO TO ANSWER IT CORRECTLY:
You have been outlining all year long. Therefore simply use your
primary outline as the final answer to this question.
KEYWORD:
9. List.
SAMPLE QUESTION:
List five ways to increase the power of a stock Ford engine.
WHAT TO DO TO ANSWER IT CORRECTLY:
A listing is simply a naming. Therefore number the subjects asked
for, and name them one after the other without further elaboration.
KEYWORD:
10.Define.
SAMPLE QUESTION:
Define the term expletive.
WHAT TO DO TO ANSWER IT CORRECTLY:
A definition is the explanation of the meaning of a word. Therefore
start your definition with An (expletive) is, and explain its
meaning in the remainder of the sentence. Few words will require
more than one sentence.
KEYWORD:
11.State.
SAMPLE QUESTION:
State three reasons for Red Chinas being barred from the United
Nations.
IN SUMMARY:
Essay tests are graded on two separate accomplishments:
CHAPTER 24
The simple strategy of making the test help you pass it
Now that you are familiar with the types of questions that you will
encounter in your tests, and have been drilled in the proper way to answer
each of them, let us now bring all these test-taking skills together, and see
how you use them to pull out a top grade in an actual examination.
We have already done this for an essay-type test. Now we will set
up the same strategy for the hundreds of short-answer tests you will
take during your lifetime.
Here you go. On your way to another test-taking triumph.
THE FIRST FIVE MINUTES
Your first goal, when you enter the room, is always to overcome
whatever emotional excitement you may have brought with you. You
want to take this test calmly and coolly, in complete charge of all the
information you have prepared.
For this reason, the first five minutes are crucial. It is during these
five minutes that you either settle yourself down to productive work, and
make the test work for you, or give away to panic and mind-blocking. In
order to avoid this, you follow this simple procedure:
1. Lay down your pencil on the desk, and do not pick it up for five
minutes.
2. Use this five minutes to pre-read the exam. To be come familiar with
the entire exam before you do any part of it. To read all directions
twice. To look especially for the following points:
A. What are the exact instructions? Are the answers to be given in
any special way? Is there a choice of questions, or does every
question have to be answered?
B. Are there any questions that you anticipated? If so, they will
give a big boost to your confidence.
C. How long is the exam? Will there be a time problem? If so, start
on the easiest or most familiar questions, skipping those you
dont know and coming back to them later if you have the time.
D. What parts of the exam give you the most credit? Do these first,
if you them.
E. Are there any questions that are closely related? If so, make
sure you dont give the same answer on both.
F. Do nay questions give the answer, or suggest the answer, to
another question? This happens far too often to be overlooked,
and can add as much as 10 per cent to 15 per cent to your grade.
3.All these pre-reading questions must be answered before you
pick up your pen actually to begin writing the exam.
IN SUMMARY:
In taking any test, you must first concentrate on eliminating:
1. Overexcitement and emotional block.
2. Careless mistakes.
Once you have done this, you then concentrate on making one part
of the test help you solve the other, as we have shown you in these
chapters.
These three basic techniques add up to top grades on any test that
can be thrown at you. Exercised properly, they give you an enormous
advantage over any other person inn that test room.
EPILOGUE
How to make yourself into a mental champion
There it is. You now have the techniques you need to double your
power to learn.
They are simple, fast, and enormously effective. Used properly,
they can get the job you might have missed, the recognition and prestige
that may have passed you by, the extra pay raises that might have
otherwise slipped through your fingers all the rewards in life that go
only to the well-prepared, well-educated person who can use every drop
of power of his brain is capable of.
But they cant do a darned one of these things without your active
support!
Reading these techniques even learning them is just not
enough. Teaching them to yourself is not enough. Even memorizing them
is not enough.
They are good to you until they become SECOND NATURE!
Until they are built into your nervous system as reaction patterns or
habits. Until you do them automatically perfectly without thinking.
As easily and quickly and naturally as you now write your name.
And this means PRACTICE!
PRACTICE!
PRACTICE!
Champions in any field, whether it be art, or sports, or business, or
study, are made by two great tolls:
1. Knowledge or technique
2. Practice to perfect that technique.
The first element, knowledge, can be bought. It can be bought in the
form of a book, or a lecture, or even in the form of hard experience.
But the second element, practice, can only be earned. It is a function
of character. It is a result of that inner drive, persistence, endurance,
patience, will to win, inability to quit that makes the champion.
In life, it is not intelligence that makes the great difference. We have
all seen too many brilliant minds left panting behind shattered and
defeated doomed to lives of nameless mediocrity.
In life, ultimately, it is drive that counts! The tortoise still wins; the
hare still is left sleeping in obscurity!
A winner never quits; a quitter never wins!
Practice makes perfect.
This old wisdom. True wisdom. Wisdom that works today in the
science laboratory as much as it did in the groves of Socratic Greece.
Teach it to yourself. Build into your brain, not only the techniques that
produce success, but the drive that will settle for nothing less than
success, and you will have learned the most powerful secret of success in
the entire world! A secret that will open up an entire new world of
accomplishment to you!
Good Luck! And Good Learning!
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