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Become a SuperLearner: Learn Speed Reading & Advanced Memorization

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Develop the Skills to Learn Anything Faster, Easier, and More Effectively
Written by the creators of the #1 bestselling course of the same name, this book will teach you how to "hack" your learning, reading, and memory skills, empowering you to learn everything faster and more effectively.

What Would You Do If You Could Learn Anything 3 Times Faster?
In our rapidly changing and information-driven society, the ability to learn quickly is the single most important skill. Whether you're a student, a professional, or simply embarking on a new hobby, you are forced to grapple with an every-increasing amount of information and knowledge. We've all experienced the frustration of an ever-growing reading list, struggling to learn a new language, or forgetting things you learned in even your favorite subjects.

This Book Will Teach You 3 Major Skills:
Speed reading with high (80%+) comprehension and understanding
Memory techniques for storing and recalling vast amounts of information quickly and accurately
Developing the cognitive infrastructure to support this flood of new information long-term
However, the SuperLearning skills you'll learn in this course are applicable to many aspects of your every day life, from remembering phone numbers to acquiring new skills or even speaking new languages.

Anyone Can Develop Super-Learning Skills
This course is about improving your ability to learn new skills or information quickly and effectively. We go far beyond the kinds of "speed reading" (or glorified skimming) you may have been exposed to, diving into the actual cognitive and neurological factors that make learning easier and more successful. We also give you advanced memory techniques to grapple with the huge loads of information you'll soon be able to process.

"This book should be the go-to reference for anyone looking to upgrade their mind's firmware!"
-Benny Lewis, Language Learning Expert

Learn How to Absorb and Retain Information in a Whole New Way - A Faster, Better Way

The Authors' Proprietary Method for Teaching Speed Reading & Memory Improvement
You may have even taken a normal speed reading course in the past, only to realize that you didn't retain anything you read. The sad irony is that in order to properly learn things like speed reading skills and memory techniques in the past, you had to read dozens of books and psychological journals to decode the science behind it. Or, you had to hire an expensive private tutor who specializes in SuperLearning. That's what I did. And it changed my life.

Fortunately, my co-authors (experts and innovators in the fields of superlearning, memory improvement, and speed reading) agreed to help me transform their materials into the first ever digital course. Over 25,000 satisfied students later, we have transformed our course into a book you can enjoy anywhere.

Our teaching methodology relies heavily on at-home exercises. The chapters themselves are only part of what you're buying. You will be practicing various exercises and assignments on a regular basis over the course a 7 week schedule.

In addition to the lectures, there are hours of supplemental video and articles which are considered part of the curriculum.

221 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 1, 2015

199 people are currently reading
574 people want to read

About the author

Jonathan A. Levi

3 books31 followers

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5 stars
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62 (25%)
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Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for Frank Becker.
248 reviews4 followers
April 11, 2017
When one ignores the first ~20% of the book (where one is basically told how great and useful the course is... but also what the course is not) and a bit of the hype, then it really is a useful collection of tips, examples and techniques to simplify and accelerate learning new information. Chapters are short and to the point.
The speed-reading part might not even be the most important bit (although it is the biggest).
I also like that Jonathan makes it clear that this is no miracle drug; but that actual work (practice) is required to make it work. Just by reading this book nothing improves... Well; just using markers to memorize stuff is dead-easy (and even fun) - but remarkably effective!

PS: I also "took" the udemy course - which is practically the same content as the book, but probably more accessible to some people. Notably the undemy course is still actively improved (in the last 3 months 2 chapter were added; due to user feedback)!
Profile Image for Eat.Sleep.Lift.Read..
156 reviews38 followers
July 1, 2015
A rehash of information that is readily available on the webs.

So, move along, nothing to see here.

(If you have no idea how to learn or read 'quickly' then you might get a chub from this book)

Profile Image for Steven.
28 reviews1 follower
November 27, 2016
This book, if you will use it and practice it consistently, will guarantee to improve your reading speed and learning comprehension. I've read a number of speed reading books (3 to be exact) and I've also bought their Udemy course and in my opinion this book is great for those who find watching the lectures a little boring like for me since the internet in my country is slower as compared in the US. The book, like the course also contains exercises you need to do in order to improve, so you will not just be browsing through this book but you will continually refer to it. The book, based on the copy that I have, has links in it so you might want to also have the kindle version.
Profile Image for Jerome.
18 reviews3 followers
August 2, 2017
The techniques provided are not so simple and am still going through the exercises, trying to put things in practice.

Bit early to provide a full review but from my first gut, with a constant practice of techniques such as Mind map, Memory palace, Saccades, Visionary impulse, Overcoming Subvocalization, Mental& Creative markers, Chunking&Linking, Card reading - one can at least improve their speed by 30% and retain more comprehension. (from my experience so far)
Profile Image for Colby Williams.
21 reviews6 followers
November 29, 2015
There are a ton of courses on speed reading, and just as many on memorization techniques.
What is different about this course?

Well, Jonathon does an amazing job of COMBINING the two...and explaining why you can't JUST learn to speed read. In order to comprehend and retain material, you need to combine memory techniques in order to successfully become a "SuperLearner"

I started this course a few months back, and I've been sloooowly practicing the skills. I recently picked it back up and completed the rest and read through the book material as well.

In order to get the full benefit, you have to really take the practice of creating mental markers seriously. It is very helpful! Also, the speed reading and portions about pre-reading make a huge difference.

Overall, it's a great course...but coming back to it after learning more about the subject was even more useful in order to fill in some gaps.
Profile Image for Vaijinath Biradar.
13 reviews
January 14, 2023
My key takeaways:

1. Smell, taste and sight were first senses to develop.
2. We were able to locate ourselves better through spatial markers.
3.Adults question why we learn, as there is need for checking the information useability and application.
4. To speed read, reduce subvocalization.
5.pick chunk of words to avoid multiple fixations.
6. Make use of bizzare visuals to create permanent photographic memories.
7. Eye-learning is much more powerful than mind -learning .
8. To teach is to learn twice.
9. Use Spaced Repeatiton system to create permanent memory.
10. SQ3R- survey, question, read, recall and review also helps in becoming a superlearner
Profile Image for Chris Esposo.
680 reviews59 followers
September 15, 2019
Not bad content, but poor format. The book introduces several techniques designed to augment reading speed, comprehension, and memory. These include the memory palace techniques, where you encode some facts into a mental object "housed" in a room where a spatial location is mapped to a context of information. In theory this increases the likelihood of knowledge retention and retrieval.

Like arithmetic, all of the introduced techniques need to be practised heavily to become functionally useful. The speed reading section seems familiar and probably works, but definitely not for reading technical material, or any other information-dense text.

The book is basically a checklist of things you can try, and a template of a workout plan, but if you are motivated enough to find and assemble that yourself, not worth the purchase.
Profile Image for Tim Dierckxsens.
19 reviews
December 18, 2015
Title says it all

I love learning yet it can get frustrating. Too many passions, too many books, too many courses and not enough time.
This course taught by Jonathan Levi was a godsend. I boosted my reading speed from 179 wpm to 510 wpm but most importantly I learnt great techniques to store important insights into my long term memory. I recommend this course to anyone who aspires to dive into accelerated learning and comprehension.
21 reviews
October 7, 2017
When I first encountered super learning, according to the way Levi described it, I thought it may be a secret society, training people with learning and memorisation methods unknown to the mankind.

But soon I realised they're just packaging other people's knowledge in one place and showing it in a way that you may say how I was living without it?

Scientists to the rescue.
Profile Image for Sergey Shishkin.
162 reviews48 followers
November 16, 2017
This book covers quite useful techniques and is well structured. I expected it however to be more self-contained. This is rather a syllabus for the training program with short abstract-like chapters and a bunch of external links and exercises.
Profile Image for Ezz Eddin.
2 reviews
February 15, 2020
I expected much learning about how I can speed my reading, but just two or three examples for speed reading is not enough. Though, I knew there are speed reading tests online and that's the benefit I got from this book. The rest is easy to be known.
Profile Image for Ana.
80 reviews1 follower
June 23, 2019
Some of the proposed tricks were indeed interesting.
Profile Image for Chandan Sharma.
5 reviews
September 15, 2019
It is only a summery or revision if you have read books in this genre.
A bunch of information
But no explanation of how, why properly I would say
Profile Image for Audrey.
229 reviews19 followers
December 23, 2019
It was a well written book but not a lot of new information
Profile Image for Arsene Andrei.
25 reviews
January 19, 2020
Deși e în engleză e o lectură ușoară, dar tehnicile prezente trebuie exersate ca atare, pentru a se vedea îmbunătățiri în stilul de citire și reținere pe termen lung a informațiilor.
Profile Image for Taylor Ball.
16 reviews2 followers
January 21, 2020
Interesting premise. I read it in one sitting. I'm going to rereview it after I try some of it's ideas more in depth
Profile Image for Christopher .
12 reviews
February 6, 2020
I think, if you do the assigned readings and watch the assigned videos, you'll benefit from this book.
Profile Image for David Tomihiro.
2 reviews
June 9, 2015
Standing on the shoulders of giants

While there is some good information to be found here, very little is original. The author creates a "course" with a syllabus that links around the web (from TED Talks to Wikipedia) and instructs you to check the online syllabus for homework at the end of every chapter.

While a certain amount of borrowing is to be understood, there is zero synthesis offered. Instead, all you get is a roadmap that visits real thinking written in a style more often found in a high school classroom than a traditionally published book.

It might be worth the read if you've never looked into speed reading or learning theory, but if you have rudimentary research skills and an internet connection, you'd be better served investigating the subjects yourself.
Profile Image for Firdaus.
27 reviews1 follower
April 29, 2016
If you ever took the course, this may appear as supplementary.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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