[nabs-l] skimming

Jedi loneblindjedi at samobile.net
Wed Mar 16 01:25:14 UTC 2011


It is true that sighted students often skip a lot of material. But the 
advantage in not being able to do that exactly as the sighted do is 
that you learn more. I usually have top grades in my classes, and I 
really do think it's because I have to read through more material than 
my peers do. After all, it is difficult to know exactly what material 
is not really required unless the professor spells it out for you. So 
the consequences of skipping through stuff might be that you don't get 
what you need from the material.

Respectfully,
Jedi

Original message:
> "I know that the successful student does not read material from cover to
> cover"


> They don't?

> Maybe that's why I don't have a degree yet

> Maybe I'll try any suggestions that might be discussed here too.

> Jen
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> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Antonio M. Guimaraes Jr." <freethaught at gmail.com>
> To: "National Association of Blind Students mailing list"
> <nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2011 7:58 PM
> Subject: [nabs-l] skimming


>> Hello all,

>> I am stuck catching up on missed work with hundreds of pages to be read
>> quickly. Like, yesterday.

>> I read mostly from RFBD recorded materials, and most if not all books fail
>> to take full advantage of DAISY features to make books really most useful
>> to all.

>> I have no idea how to skim and browse through a poorly marked RFBD book.
>> There is no physical structure like paragraph indentations, chapter and
>> section headings, boxes, charts, italics, and other text booky features to
>> ease the study process.

>> Kurzweil may make this easier to accomplish with their browse features,
>> but I haven't tried getting materials from bookshare since RFBD tends to
>> have my texts in their collection.


>> The study process is so much easier if I have a human reader, but I can't
>> carry one in my pocket :D

>> I know that the successful student does not read material from cover to
>> cover, and there is yet no full navigation solution  for a complete
>> ability to navigate all of a book by exploring its parts, skimming, and
>> extracting the author's thoughts.

>> RFBD could make more scholars if their books would more closely comply
>> with DAISY standards.

>> i would be really interested to hear how you get this done.

>> Looking for a better way to read,

>> Antonio Guimaraes


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