What Is Skimming?
Skimming is one of the
tools you can use to read more in less time. Skimming refers
to looking only for the general or main
ideas, and works best with non-fiction (or factual) material. With skimming,
your overall understanding is reduced because you don’t read everything. You
read only what is important to your purpose. Skimming takes place while reading
and allows you to look for details in addition to the main ideas.
How to skim. Many people
think that skimming is a haphazard process placing the eyes where ever they
fall. However, to skim effectively, there has to be a structure but you don’t
read everything. What you read is more important than what you
leave out. So what material do you read and what material do
you leave out?
Let’s say you are doing research
on a long chapter or a web site. By reading the first few paragraphs in detail,
you will get a good idea of what information will be discussed. Once you know
where the reading is headed, you can begin to read only the first sentence of
each paragraph. Also called topic sentences,
they give you the main idea of the paragraph. If you do not get the main idea
in the topic sentence or if the paragraph greatly interests you, then you may
want to skim more.
At the end of each topic sentence, your eyes should
drop down through the rest of the paragraph, looking for important pieces of
information, such as names, dates, or events. Continue to read only topic
sentences, dropping down through the rest of the paragraphs, until you are near
the end. Since the last few paragraphs may contain a conclusion or summary, you
should stop skimming there and read in detail. Remember that your overall
comprehension will be lower than if you read in detail. If while skimming, you
feel you are grasping the main ideas, then you are skimming correctly.
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