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August 2, 2010, 04:25PM PT in Exam Preparation Blog  |  2 Comments

Improve Your Reading Comprehension

Reading ComprehensionAre you reading and reading and reading your materials but they just aren’t sinking in? Have you read that one chapter so many times you’re starting to see it when you sleep? Does it seem like no matter how hard you try you just can’t get the information to stick?

So…how’s your reading comprehension? Are you an active reader? Or a passive one? The purpose of reading is to connect the ideas on the page to what you already know. Candidates with a history in exercise science may find the material in the manual challenging but familiar. However, if you are starting fresh and don’t know much about your subject, then pouring words of text into your mind is like pouring water into your hand – you don’t retain much.

When you are preparing for the ACE Certification Exam, there are two main issues. The first is the sheer volume of necessary reading (yes, Personal Trainer materials, I’m looking at you). The second issue is the ability to not only read it all, but also to comprehend and digest most of it meaningfully.

So how do you improve your reading comprehension? How do you help the information you read stick in your head? Reading comprehension requires participation (beyond looking at the words), motivation, concentration, and good study techniques. Below are a few techniques you might consider…

  • Know how the information is structured, especially on a chapter or paragraph level. An earlier post about reading references this as well. Remember that the first sentence of a paragraph or section can provide an overview of what that section is about.
  • Pay attention to supporting clues. Was there a reference to a table or chart in that paragraph you just read? Well then, head on over and take a look at that table. Chances are the author is using it to illustrate a point. Also, seeing the information in another form (illustration versus text) can increase comprehension.
  • Highlight, review and summarize important ideas. But….don’t highlight everything! Doing this makes your book a sea of color and your eyes can’t figure out what to focus on. Concentrate on key words and phrases to draw your attention to that area. Remember that with ACE we stress understanding and application of information rather than rote memorization.
  • Read aloud to yourself. Although it is faster to form words in your mind rather than on your lips, it can help to ‘hear’ the information as well as read it. Many people  are geared towards auditory learning. Reading aloud uses both your auditory and visual learning styles.
  • Interrogate your text. Ask questions such as ‘what is the main idea?’ ‘How does that diagram relate to this text?’ ‘Why is this section in bold/italics?’ ‘How does this section relate to the previous one?’ This is critical thinking and it can be incredibly helpful in making you stop and consider the text rather than just speeding through and attempting to memorize.
  • Tell the information to someone else. This is one of the tried and true methods of determining how well you know the information – can you explain it to someone else? Especially someone who hasn’t studied the material?

Preparing for your ACE Certification Exam requires a lot of reading. And that reading requires active participation. Just scanning through the material or reading on auto pilot isn’t going to help your comprehension. Become an active reader. Work at increasing your reading comprehension so you can spend less time reading and more time understanding.

Questions? Contact an ACE Education Consultant at 1-888-825-3636 x782

By April Merritt
April Merritt holds a BS in Exercise Science and MA in Health Promotion and is an ACE-certified Personal Trainer (ACE-CPT), Group Fitness Instructor (ACE-GFI) and Lifestyle & Weight Management Consultant (ACE-LWMC).

April holds a BS in Exercise Science and MA in Health Promotion and is an ACE-certified Personal Trainer (ACE-CPT) and Lifestyle & Weight Management Consultant (ACE-LWMC).

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By Sheila Robinson, Wednesday, August 11, 2010
This is my problem. Have not been to school in 27yrs and don't read as much as I used to in my ealier years. I read a chapter and find myself not understanding or remembering what I read. But I guess, getting up several times and taking 2days to read a chapter, isn't helping any eighter huh?.. It's hard for me to retain all this, but I am finding that like you mentioned, if we apply what we just read out loud by talking to someone or acting what we can out, it really does help. Great post and thank you for the tips.

By Roger Johnson, Monday, August 30, 2010
Hi Ace! I am reading out of the Third Adition Book. I've signed up for the study coach program but it was for the fourth addition. Does the exam differ? Could I still go about the Third Addition with the Fourth Addition study coach? Where do I find the pracitice test online?

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