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ExecuRead

ExecuRead

888-439-3287
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www.execuread.com
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About ExecuRead

ExecuRead is a worldwide provider of Advanced Reading & Comprehension training courses to statesmen, the military, corporations, universities and individual executives, professionals, managers and students. You spent 12 to 16 years acquiring your professional skills but only 2 years learning the skill of reading. ExecuRead brings you up to speed. With guaranteed results. On-site group courses available.

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Reviews about ExecuRead

Exit Realty South - Walid Muhammad

Hello!

Hello,Thank you for the opportunity to connect and share your business with clients. I gave you 5 Stars and Google+ for your business! Please send me your facebook page and let's exchange business on Facebook as well - http://on.fb.me/mOGtFc

By
haroldbloom at Citysearch

ExecuRead Speed Reading Course

A year ago, over a weekend, i took Dr. Stewart's Speed Reading course. Basically, I never thought that I would have any practical use for it in my health insurance business. THEN, last summer, Congress passed the new Health Care Reform bill and I figured I had better understand what it was all about - all 2400+ pages of it.\t\nHaving practiced my speed reading weekly, i started reading the bill. I have finished multiple readings by now, and I would not have taken on this challenge unless for Bruce's course. Now, people are contacting me for information, since I have become somewhat of an expert on the 'real' facts. Thank you, again, Bruce for your wonderful training.

By
Amelia Sybenga at Citysearch

Execuread Weekend Speed Reading Course

Letter to Dr. Bruce Stewart at Execuread:\t\n\t\nDear Bruce,\t\n \t\nI just wanted to write and thank you for the course and the e-mails that followed. I will admit after the course I did not continue studying. I have begun practicing since returning from break, but the probability of doing so was less likely if not for your occassional reminders. Guilt does wonderful things for me. :)\t\n \t\nEverywhere I go now, I can see whole paragraphs (sometimes whole pages) and I don't even think about it. I mark off sets of pages in my text books, per your instructions, and I practice with the timer. Everytime I practice I get faster. Although reading the medical texts takes a lot longer than pleasure reading, I picked up a non-fiction, non-medical book and was through the first 100 pages in about 15 minutes with near 100% comprehension. I was reading around 3,000 wpm; I did not explicitly track the time. I looked up at the clock thinking I must have been reading for an hour, terrified I had taken such a long break; alas, only 15 minutes had passed. This may not be a super fast time for you or your students, but I was ecstatically happy. I came to your class reading at about 290 wpm, and left, after two days, at around 1200 wpm. It has been two months since I took the class. I have only been practicing intermittently for the last two weeks.\t\n \t\nRegarding my medical text books, I spend about 30 minutes per chapter reading, including preview and 10-15 minutes of practice. Normally this would have taken me close to 3 hours without the practice. I feel I have minimal comprehension, until I get to the chapter questions; I know the answers in my own words and feel like I am guessing. When I check the answers, I am right on track. \t\n \t\nI cannot begin to thank you more. I have always prided my self for efficiency and improving my efficiency, reading excluded, and the importance of reading for my education/carreer cannot be understated.\t\n \t\nI hope you had wonderful holidays, and I hope this year finds you well.\t\n \t\nAmelia Sybenga, OMS I\t\nLincoln Memorial University - DeBusk College of Osteopathic Medicine\t\n6595 Cumberland Gap Drive\t\nHarrogate, TN 37752\t\namelia.sybenga@lmunet.edu

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ExecuRead Blog

iPad & Kindle versus Gutenberg

As gizmo-addicts guzzle Kindles and iPads, I'm frequently asked the big question – "What's better? Tablet e-readers or Gutenberg's printed books?" Well, for the prolific high-speed reader, e-reader tablets simply cannot cut it. Even at slow speeds, Gutenberg's printed books have advantages over tablets. In a recent study of reading speeds on tablets versus printed books, Dr Jacob Nielsen found reading speeds on Apple's iPad to be 6.2% slower than in printed books and Amazon's Kindle 2 to be 1... READ MORE Posted July 16, 2010 at 10:01 AM

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