Introduction
Math text typically alternates passages of explanation in English with pieces of mathematics such as example problems.
When reading explanatory material in a math text…
- Read every word, one word at a time. You can’t catch the “drift” by skimming
- Every word counts (even 2-letter ones)
Forget About Speed Reading
Take your time. Make sure you understand each sentence before going on to the next.
- Remember that familiar words may have different mathematical meanings you need to learn
- If you don’t understand how a word is used, STOP and find out before going on
- Reread as many times as necessary from the beginning
- When reading math text, slower is better
When looking at mathematics (equations and numerical expressions)…
- See how each line follows from the line before
- Read any written explanations the author gives you
- Be sure you know where each line comes from before going on
- Do not skip steps!
Read with pencil and paper in hand
- Reproduce examples as you go along
- Try to work out each line for yourself, step by step
Go over problems that the author has worked out in detail
Successful students rely heavily upon these. Go through them until you understand every step.
How to work a solved problem in the textbook
- Work through the problem one step at a time
- Close the book and try to work it again on your own
- Repeat until you can reproduce the solution with the book closed
- Try not to memorize the solution
- Keep track of “what to do” to move from each line to the next
- It’s okay if your version has more lines than the author’s (it may take you two or three steps to accomplish what the author does in one). This is a good sign that you’re thinking for yourself!
- Be patient. It’s common to spend an hour or two on a single page. It’s worth your time to learn the process.
After you can work through the solved problems on your own, the homework should be much easier since there will be similar problems. Time spent on problems the author has solved for you will pay off in higher grades.
Don’t worry if the author or your instructor makes it “look easy.” They work hard when you aren’t looking. The author chooses “cleaned up” problems for his or her textbook. Teachers do the same thing when preparing for a lecture. Good math is messy! If you get really lost, scrap your work and start over on that problem.
Math texts with visual illustrations
Spend time studying any pictures. Every line and symbol is there for a specific reason. Take the time to understand the picture thoroughly—in detail. Pay special attention to graphs and charts (they convey lots of information in a small space).
Conclusion
You don’t merely “read” a math textbook—you work through it. The information has to be dug out, not just skimmed over. It is a slow process, but it’s the only way to really understand what the math text is trying to tell you.
The bottom line is to go slow when reading math text. It’s not a race to see how fast you finish, but how much you understand.
So be patient, remember that “slow is fast,” and enjoy math reading!
Candela Citations
- Image of math problems. Authored by: Jeremy Mikkola. Located at: https://flic.kr/p/379T7b. License: CC BY: Attribution
- How to Read a Math Textbook. Provided by: Great Basin College. Located at: http://www.gbcnv.edu/documents/ASC/docs/00000075.pdf. License: CC BY-NC-ND: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
- Image of protractors. Authored by: Dean Hochman. Located at: https://flic.kr/p/o4HPL7. License: CC BY: Attribution