<p>It has helped me a bit, but I am still unable to answer my questions quickly enough and every once in a while I just get flat out stuck on a problem and waste too much time on it because I don't want to leave it blank/guess.</p>
<p>What have you guys done to improve your speed with CR? Reading those full , long passages is a huge time consumer.</p>
<p>Bump. I really need help with this</p>
<p>Google “Spreeder” and use it. Your issue is you’re probably saying the words in your head as you read. You’ll only be able to read as fast as you speak. Spreeder will make you read the words without saying them in your head. Of course you could practice this with any piece of literature. You’ll eventually become good at it and reading will become less of a chore.</p>
<p>And I’ve never read this method so I don’t know what it is, but I would tell you to go to the questions for the line references first and underline them in the passage. Once you get to a line, stop and answer the corresponding question.</p>
<p>@ThanksIKnow Yeah I say the words while I read them, it’s hard to retain without saying it in my head.</p>
<p>I’ll look up Spreeder, hopefully it works. Has it helped you read faster?</p>
<p>@henrytheunicorn Yeah it did help me. The speed will probably come quickly, the comprehension will take longer though. When I took the SAT I said the words in my head and I did fine. But if you’re really that slow of a reader, this method could help.</p>
<p>@ThanksIKnow So I tried reading without saying it in my head, but my comprehension was really crap. It’s fine on easy to read passages like the one on Spreeder, but SAT passages are a bit harder to comprehend so I had to say it in my head in order to understand what I was saying. I’m hoping it improves with more practice</p>
<p>@henrytheunicorn Yeah, it’s definitely something you can master. If you have enough time I would definitely try and perfect it.</p>