How to Get the Most Out of Reading

In today’s age of distractions, reading has become harder than ever. This article explores simple, research-backed habits that can turn reading from a fleeting activity into a lasting source of insight.

Reading, especially in today’s distracted world, can feel like pouring water into a leaky bucket. The pages turn, you click on your phone a couple of times, time passes, and once you are done reading, you realise that very little has actually stuck. The fix is not more effort, but better mechanics in ensuring how deliberately you read, what you do before opening the book, and how you engage after closing it.

Read With a Purpose, Not Just Hope

The brain learns faster when it is hunting for something specific. Studies on goal-directed reading show higher comprehension and recall when readers begin with a clear question rather than a vague intention to “learn.” Before you start, ask one concrete thing: What do I want to understand better by the end of this chapter? A question definitely sharpens attention, which is otherwise prone to distraction.

Warm Up with Context

Comprehension improves when new material connects to what you already know, or when it attaches to emotion or experience. Large reviews of reading research show that background knowledge reduces cognitive load and improves recall. For example, a theory about incentives becomes unforgettable once you see your own behaviour hiding inside it.

Argue with the Author

Agreement is easy. Disagreement is useful. When readers actively challenge claims like “What would break this argument?”, “ What evidence is missing?”, comprehension and critical retention improve.
Treat the author like a colleague across a table, not a lecturer on a stage.

Write by Hand When It Matters

When you come across a text that appeals, you feel tempted to underline it. But let me stop you there – underlining isn’t productive at all. On the other hand, writing short notes by hand, rather than typing, slows you down just enough to force decisions about what matters. That friction is where learning happens.

Space Your Reading Like Training Sessions

Attention is a finite resource; once it slips, stop. Short, focused sessions outperform long, foggy ones. Research on cognitive fatigue shows performance drops sharply after sustained overload. Stop when you feel overwhelmed and come back when you are ready. The books are forgiving and patient.

Read fewer books, more than once

Depth beats volume. Studies on expertise show that mastery comes from repeated exposure with reflection, not constant novelty. Re-reading after time has passed reveals ideas you were not ready for earlier. A good book ages like you do. A bad one stays exactly the same.

Reading well is an act of respect—for your time, for the author’s thinking, and for your own capacity to change. The goal isn’t to finish more books—it’s to absorb, reflect, and apply what you read. A single book that shifts your thinking is more valuable than ten books you breeze through and forget.

Now go forth, read wisely, and most importantly—remember what you read!

What are your strategies for reading well?

Picture of Richa Chadda

Richa Chadda

Richa is an avid reader, a keen traveler, a dreamer and a firm believer in the power of books. She is passionate about working for and with children and is of the opinion that learning is a by-product of having fun. With a strong interest in literature and digital technology, Richa works with klib, making books and reading accessible and enjoyable for employees of organisations.

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