One of the problems we face is of information overload. We
read books, handouts, newspapers, magazines and Internet articles and are
expected to have instant recall of the right information at the right time.
For students effective reading is of critical importance.
Students at top b-schools have to read more than a hundred
books during their course. So how do they ensure they get the best out of
their reading?
But first let us understand what’s wrong about how we typically
read non-fiction books.
How do we typically read?
We take a book, sit or lie, (maybe with the TV or the radio
or the music system on) and read it from cover to cover. If there is less time
(like the night before the exam), we read faster. Our minds wander off and we
rudely pull ourselves back from that seductive wonderland, cursing the exam or
the deadlines. We get irritated, do not brook any disturbance and feel a sense
of achievement when we have finished the book. We remember something about it
the next day but within a week, it is gone.
If we are more active, we sit upright and we highlight
sections of a book. This gives better focus as our hands are busy, and at the
end of it we have a fluorescent, highlighted / underlined book. But when we need
the information and we read the highlighted paragraphs, do we know what we
highlighted and why? We also realise that we have highlighted 50 % of the
book. Do we know which book to refer? And if it was a library book?
If we are even more active, we make notes. Start from the
first page and assiduously copy salient paragraphs. Better than highlighting
as we are actively writing and therefore cannot daydream. Since we are
copying, we are reading a paragraph twice or thrice and slowly. If time is
short, we make notes faster (illegibly). Sometime we are in-the-zone and we
make notes of the book without even knowing what we are writing. Reminds me of
lectures – same process – at the end of the lecture, lots of notes but no
remembrance of the lecture.
When I read my notes (if I can decipher my handwriting) I
have no clue what it was about.
Ah yes, the internet! How can I forget the proliferation of
e-books and search engines. So now I can search for anything I want, whenever
I want. Does it help? When was the last time we were able to get stuff that
was relevant? And if I am in an interview, do I say, “Hang on guys, while I
get the answer from my mobile phone!”
Why can’t we really read?
We need to participate actively in the reading process (as
opposed to passively be awash with information), analyse and categorise the
data in real time such that the information makes sense and we are focused
enough to retain this information in our mind, actively looking for cross
references, coincidences, linkages so that the concept stick.
We need to have a some sort of Knowledge Management System
(hey! stop groaning) that allows us to keep the information in a readable,
recallable format such that if we look at our notes, we can grasp the concept
in its entirety, recall the salient features and delve deeper due to the
references and cross references.
Sounds like an awful lot of work! Might as well just read
and hope for the best. But think about the following plausible scenario:
Placements are round the corner and the chaps coming for an
interview are jaded lot who just came from a set of colleges like ours, who
want to go home and who need a reason to flunk us. So they ask the first
candidate (poor him), a question about the latest fad, say, ‘Blue Ocean Strategy’
and our colleague’s mind freezes. Man, he had just read that book and now he
doesn’t remember a thing!
When he comes out, all of us crowd around him and in a daze
he tells us about the interview. All of us power up our laptops and Google for
‘Blue Ocean’. Of course, this question is not asked again in the interview,
but something similar and equally arcane is.
In my 20 years of experience I must have read an average of
1 non-technical book (not to mention manuals and other stuff pertaining to the
job) a month, which comes to 240 odd books (actually a lot more) but for the
life of me, I don’t remember most of it. That was a colossal waste of time and
money.
Bottom line, if I cannot recall what I read, there is no
purpose in reading.
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