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Scan Artist How Evelyn Wood Convinced The World That Speedreading Worked Hardcover Marcia Biederman

  • SKU: BELL-10477070
Scan Artist How Evelyn Wood Convinced The World That Speedreading Worked Hardcover Marcia Biederman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Scan Artist How Evelyn Wood Convinced The World That Speedreading Worked Hardcover Marcia Biederman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Chicago Review Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 3.59 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Marcia Biederman
ISBN: 9781641601627, 1641601620
Language: English
Year: 2019
Edition: Hardcover

Product desciption

Scan Artist How Evelyn Wood Convinced The World That Speedreading Worked Hardcover Marcia Biederman by Marcia Biederman 9781641601627, 1641601620 instant download after payment.

The best-known educator of the twentieth century was a scammer in cashmere. “The most famous reading teacher in the world,” as television hosts introduced her, Evelyn Wood had little classroom experience, no degrees in reading instruction, and a background that included work at the Mormon mission in Germany at the time when the church was cooperating with the Third Reich. Nevertheless, a nation spooked by Sputnik and panicked by paperwork eagerly embraced her promises of a speed-reading revolution. Journalists, lawmakers and two US presidents lent credibility to Wood’s claims of turbocharging reading speeds through a method once compared to the miracle at Lourdes.Timemagazine reported Woods grads could polish offDr. Zhivagoin one hour; a senator swore that Wood's method had boosted his reading speed to more than ten thousand words per minute.
But science showed that her method taught only skimming, with disastrous effects on comprehension—a fact Wood was aware of from early in her career. Fudging test results, and squelching critics, she founded a company that enrolled half a million. The course’s popularity endured even as evidence of its shortcomings continued to accumulate. Today, as apps and online courses attempt to spark a speed-reading revival, this engaging look at Wood’s rise from mission worker to marketer exposes the pitfalls of embracing a con artist's worthless solution to imaginary problems. 

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