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Part I. Mental Filing System

1. Mental Filing
2. Mental Hooks
3. Something Simple
4. Mental Images
5. Remember Reading
6. Unlock Memory
7. Remember This
8. Remember to Remember
9. Five Little Words
10. Shopping List
11. Sell Your Memories
12. Art of Forgetting
13. Case History
14. Speak In Public
15. Better Writing
16. Cost of Forgetting
17. Students
18. Remember Numbers
19. 100 Mental Hooks!
20. Interesting Facts

Part II. Remember Names And Faces

1. Names & Faces
2. Gold in Names
3. Name Straight
4. Repetition
5. Fastening Faces
6. What's in a Name
7. 3 Ladies, 12 Men
8. Mistaken Identity
9. Ten New Faces
10. Groups
11. On Your Own!
12. Round-up
13. Fun with Names

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Chapter 5. How to Remember Reading Lessons

A young college student I know, facing an exam in physics, sat up cramming the whole night to remember reading definitions before the test. By dawn he had mastered one hundred and fifty definitions simply by re­peating them over and over until he "had" them. When I met him on the street a week later, I asked him how he had made out. He laughed. "Oh, I passed with flying colors. But if you asked me for-one of those definitions now, I couldn't tell you, if my life depended on it!"

This is a common example of the misuse of the process of repetition while trying to remember reading material. If this student had set himself the task of learning just five new definitions a day, and had re­peated them once every day for a week, and then once each week for a month, he would have injected his hundred and fifty definitions into his brain gently, painlessly, and perma­nently. Every educator knows that cramming a head with knowledge is like loading a cannon. The powder is good for one blast, at examination, and then disappears into air.

The secret of learning by repetition is to repeat at intervals. That is why I have given you only five key words to remember so far. You might call this the first lesson. Tonight, before you go to sleep, review the five key images—alarm clock, trousers, chair, table, and newspaper—in your mind slowly, seeing them clearly. Then do the same with the list of the five largest cities.

In the morning, when you wake up and see the alarm clock, run through the lists again. You can do this while you are dressing. Notice, I do not ask you to take time away from your work to improve your memory. Any remnant of spare time -will do—while you are shaving or having your shoes shined. If you are a housewife, you might try it while you are washing the dishes or making the beds.

In the beginning you can't go over these lists too frequently. Merely reading a memory system is not mastering it, for no power on earth can make you remember reading things that you have never learned. So take your time—as much time as you please. No one is going to try to outdistance you. If you go slowly, learning the key words thoroughly, I promise you this memory system will enable you to remember practically anything you want to remember.

One way to find out if you have mastered the material pre­sented so far is to try your hand at a stiff speed drill. The fol­lowing is a skip-about test, included for the practical purpose of giving you practice in pulling out of your lists the one answer you want.

It is doubtful that you will ever be called upon suddenly to name the five largest cities in the world or the five principal causes of death in the United States, any more than you are regularly called upon to recite the entire alphabet. But although you may never have to give a complete list, you may at some time want to know a single fact, such as what the second cause of death in the United States is or which is the fourth largest city in the world. This test will help you develop speed and ease in remember reading and learning facts out of your mental file.

Place a clock where you can check the time easily, and keep a record of your speed. See if you can finish this drill in three minutes.

SPEED DRILL

What is the second largest city? ……………………………………………..
What is the third cause of death in the United States? ………………………..
What is Key Word Number Two? …………………………………………..
What is the fifth largest city? ………………………………………………..
What is the fourth cause of death? …………………………………………..
What is the largest city? ……………………………………………………..
What is Key Word Number Four? …………………………………………..
What is the second cause of death? ………………………………………….
What is Key Word Number One? …………………………………………..
What is the third largest city? ………………………………………………
What is the first cause of death? …………………………………………….
What is Key Word Number Five? …………………………………………..
What is the fifth cause of death? …………………………………………….
What is the fourth largest city? ………………………………………………
What is Key Word Number Three? …………………………………………
Time………………………………………………………

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