How To Become A Serious Reader
Cal Newport explains how to become a serious reader. Cal explains that reading is a special cognitive activity.
Cal encourages people to train their reading.
The training regime is as follows:
Start with books that you’re excited to read: e.g., pragmatic non-fiction, memoir, or genre fiction.
Find a cool reading location/ritual *outside; coffee shop; bar; cool library).
Do scheduled interval training, 5 days a week: 10 minutes at a time. Then 15 minutes. Then 20 minutes. Up time every two weeks until you can do 40 minutes.
Once at 40, turn your attention not to more time, but instead toward working in somewhat harder books where you remain very excited to master or learn the information.
It will build from there
Get your questions answered by Cal! Here’s the link: bit.ly/3U3sTvo
Listen to Episode Here (Scroll down to #238DeepQuestionsPodcast) : www.thedeeplife.com/listen/
0:00 Cal's intro
1:00 Cognitive work
1:50 Training regime 1
2:40 Reading locations
3:45 Interval reading training
Connect with Cal Newport:
🔴Visit Cal's BLOG and website: bit.ly/3luGhca
🔴Check out Cal's books: bit.ly/3ppaafc
About Cal Newport:
Cal Newport is a computer science professor at Georgetown University. In addition to his academic research, he writes about the intersection of digital technology and culture. Cal's particularly interested in our struggle to deploy these tools in ways that support instead of subvert the things we care about in both our personal and professional lives.
Cal is a New York Times bestselling author of seven books, including, most recently, A World Without Email, Digital Minimalism, and Deep Work. He's also the creator of The Time-Block Planner.
The videos are considered to be used under the "Fair Use Doctrine" of United States Copyright Law, Title 17 U.S. Code Sections 107-118. Videos are used for editorial and educational purposes only and I do not claim ownership of any original video content. I don't use said video clips in advertisements, marketing or for direct financial gain. All video content in each clip is considered owned by the individual broadcast companies.
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Пікірлер: 59
I designed a similar reading ‘training’ program for myself about 2 months ago, after coming across the research Cal refers to. I can report that it works well! I now love reading again, after years of wondering why I had gone off book reading. Sticking to fun, easy (for you) books while training definitely works! I had to force myself to stick it out to the end of each (short) chapter at first. I would get bored and irritable straight away at first and be desperate to get onto the internet straight away at first. But I kept going with a reading session each day before I turned on Netflix. Now I can’t be bothered with all the sites I used to scroll away at endlessly, reading is much more fun! I also carry my e-reader around with me all the time - it is lighter than my phone - and read a few pages in spare moments, instead of endlessly scrolling
@ShelterDogs
Жыл бұрын
What research did Cal refer to?
@helenrachelreynolds
Жыл бұрын
@@ShelterDogs Maryanne Wolf is the name of the researcher,
@ShelterDogs
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Train to read - Start with books you are excited to read. (Short stories, fiction, non fiction, memoirs) - Find a cool reading location/ritual. - Schedule interval training. * 5 days a week, 10 minutes at a time, every two weeks up it for 5 minutes more. * Do it until you get to 40 minutes. * When at 40, start upping the complexity. - Do it for a year. - Become a reader.
@Darknight526
Ай бұрын
Thank you! 🙏🏽
Cal is extremely supportive to his viewers ❤❤❤
absolute eye opener sir !!!! love and respect from India !
You'll become a reader when the longterm pain of being a non-reader eclipses the short term pain of being a reader.
@datadata8283
Жыл бұрын
That fits for everything
@Slaxsvo
Жыл бұрын
Put down the pipe, buddy.
@alittax
Жыл бұрын
@@Slaxsvo What do you mean?
@bluebellbeatnik4945
Жыл бұрын
but it's not 'pain' though is it?
@endezeichengrimm
11 ай бұрын
@@bluebellbeatnik4945 It can be a sort of pain, if you can't sit and focus for 30 minutes, at least.
Making it fun is truly important!! I worked as a 'summertime storyteller' for a public library one year, and the fun part was HUGE. It doesn't matter what the topic is, the complexity (for kids, the number of words or sentences haha), but what does matter is making it relevant and fun to them, as many positive associations as possible!
I just ordered two books “ the deep work book and so good they can’t ignore you and the time block planner. I’m so excited. Thanks for sharing so much great content!
Great genuine advice, love it
hahahahaha! yooo. I never knew Cal was so funny
Thank you, super helpful.. been challenged by reading all my life.. have literally 25 books where i have read 15% and stopped.. definitely going to try this approach.. I want to be able to read books side by side with my wife (who is a vociferous reader) and talk about them..
It was a great idea to make a separate post for this part of the podcast! I was inspired by the ideas that were shared.
Wow, that was nice suggestion.
Thank you❤
Thanks :)
Read Thomas Bernhard’s Correction in the pub. How I finally got into hockey.
It seems like this same technique could be applied to reading code as well.
Most relatable part of the episode: 4:00
Book idea: David Goggins trains Cal for 2 weeks by living with him for 14 days going everywhere with him. If anyone can do deep work on a David Goggins training plan it is Cal. A guy ( I don't recall his name) had David live with him for 30 days,wrote a book about it, and did a great interview on Joe Rogan.
@mangeshpuranik31
8 ай бұрын
Jesse Itzler is that guy.
I read a lot mostly one book per week sometimes two books
Auditory and learning and focus and attention may be more linked than eyesight and learning and focus and attention.
Is it possible that Sambit's brain, like mine, is nearly completely oriented to hearing vs. seeing words as the best path to learning? Yes, he could train to be a better reader, and your suggestions seem fine for that. But for me, I find that I "read" dozens of books a year via audio, but struggle to get through a few using Kindle or dead-tree versions. You yourself mention you "listened to" Arnold's biography (as did I). For me, I retain much more when i read by hearing than when I read by seeing, even on a single pass, and of course much more upon a second listen. Listening, understanding and retaining is almost effortless, but for me it's real work to read. Listening even works better for me on highly technical material--including one of my doctoral textbooks which was luckily available in audio. I think it's a brain difference.
@1231diabolic
7 ай бұрын
Someday if you really like a book and want to read and you don't find a audio version,what are you gonna do? Yes there might be a brain difference but this is where read training comes into play in my opinion where you can get advantage of both reading and audio. Very few percentage of books are there in audio format as of now. Reading is something you can definitely get better at with training. Ps- I have the same problem. I can listen but it's difficult to read for me. But I am trying to train myself to read now.
haha nice to see your goofy side cal
Good day barkeep😂
Did Cal say 200 min at most a week? Does not seem like enough for non-fiction books that are faily complicated and you want to retain what you read. Thoughts?
👍🏾📚💗📚💖
Why not start with audiobooks???
@bellegraves
Жыл бұрын
there's nothing wrong with audiobooks if you want the content or the story only, but if you're trying to work on the skill of reading words on paper, audiobooks won't help you. reading is a skill, just like playing an instrument. you wouldn't suggest that someone watch guitar tutorials only to learn to play the guitar, they'd have to actually pick up the guitar and try. same with reading.
Why just 40 minutes and not for example 50/60 minutes? What is the research behind this advice?
As an Englishman - what the f*** is an ascot???
3:08 Wait, I didnt know Borat is an Englishman...
“Fighting off women” because they are so attracted by your reading habits 😂!
Pub!?? and I thought you were American!!
do comic books and manga count? I think they do, what do you think.
@mattbettinson4576
Жыл бұрын
No
@arnavpandey5386
Жыл бұрын
@@mattbettinson4576 how?
@mattbettinson4576
Жыл бұрын
@@arnavpandey5386 they’re picture books
@arnavpandey5386
Жыл бұрын
@@mattbettinson4576 so?
@mattbettinson4576
Жыл бұрын
@@arnavpandey5386 you asked for opinions
Don't understand how you can talk about Arnold without a caveat about his sucking up to puppet master/monsters in anti-freedom rants. He revealed himself a sellout & should be taught as such, not praising his background, not w/o some added truth of who he is - unless it's a club you have membership in - - the rest of us will be left in the cold.
His approach is weird. i like the titles of his books, videos but i almost never have finished one. But I keep clicking on his videos when I see him.
I cannot even follow a podcast. Genuinely think I have ADHD.
@gustavoburgongianotti5598
7 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear about that struggle. Chances are you can probably do something about it and it might even not be ADHD. You can be mimicking the effects of ADHD by screwing your dopamine functioning. Scrolling, corn, videogames.. Maybe you've heard it by now but these things really mess with your attention spawn. We can always improve. Hope you keep that in mind and maybe do something about it someday. Peace