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Reading is sometimes tedious and tiresome in cases such as when:
So in order to surmount any of the hindrances stated above, you should develop and later on master a reading strategy that encourages you to rise above your easily broken enthusiasm for doing a reading task as you have no other options.
First you have to take it for granted that the texts used in exams aren't necessarily the ones that necessary please you and trigger your curiosity, so
This is not something complex to reach. It is only a matter of practice. Normally, your emblem should be "Get profit from what you read but not read what you think is profitable for you in your studies". Selecting will come later when the time of obligatory exam texts is gone by.
Imagine you have to read a text which theme has nothing of inspiring for you. What should you do?! Do you drop everything and quit the test room?! This way you prove you are a screwed dumb failure. There is nothing which could stop you from reading whatever passage you are exposed to provided that you adopt an approach which facilitates the task for you to become a modern learner. Modern learners accept change and adjust to novelties.
Next step is to read the first and last paragraphs of the text or the first and last sentences of each paragraph. The first sentence of a paragraph plays the role of the title of the paragraph. It gives you the general idea of the paragraph as a whole; and what remains in the paragraph are details which you can read later for specific information and that's the scanning technique.
Now, the reading of the text becomes less hard and a little bit inspiring. If the text is long, I have to take notes either to control the chronological sequence of events in the text if it is narrative or at least to use those notes later as an external memory that help me remember the other details of the text without reading the whole text again and over again.
Stage-managing an uninspiring text this way could be compared to a heavy tree trunk that you want to move elsewhere. The easiest and most appropriate way to do it is by chopping the trunk up into pieces so as to make it effortless and practical to displace.
These steps intelligently break the rigidity of the text no matter how dull its topic is. They lessen and weaken the hard impression you might have at the start that the text is completely Greek or incomprehensible for you. This dissection at work helps the reader to triumph over the hardness of the text and afterward to master the whole game; and the disinterest in reading the text suddenly and perhaps magically becomes a matter of the past. Obstinacy and perseverance often make miracles; they render indigestible themes at least acceptable and let you tame fierce texts.

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