I started my blog because I love reading, but along the way got frustrated. I was reading and reviewing all these great books, but not learning anything from them.
Within 2 or more weeks of reading a book I would forget most if not all of what I read. I’m not much of a leisure reader, most of what I read is developmental. So for me to finish reading a book and not remembering anything is really distressing.
But I have heard that you don’t need to remember everything in a book. You might only remember one or two things that you can put to good use. To me that didn’t sound right. Why read a book and not know everything in it. Some people even went as far as to say that you don’t need to read everything in a book, you can browse and then choose the areas that interest you and concentrate on that. For me that sounded even worse because when it comes to books I have the FOMO syndrome (Fear Of Missing Out). But I have come to realise that there is some wisdom in what these people have said. If we forget most of what we read in a book, being able to remember and use just one idea from a book is not a bad deal, is it?
And so I have decided that I want to remember, no not remember, curate one learning idea from each book I read that can go back to review. So from now on here is what my relationship with non-fiction books will look like:
- Read book
- Write quick short book review
- Write an outline of one thing thing I have learnt from the book as part of the quick review
- Write a lenghtier summary of the single lesson for indiviudal application and a team lesson for those who have read it and want to teach it in a team or group setting.
For TrainingZone I will write a tailored book review and lesson outline which will include some tips on how the lesson can be applied by learning and development practioners.
So please watch the space.
2 Responses
A very wise teacher once told
A very wise teacher once told me to remember WHERE to find the idea/topic again, not the topic word-for-word. That advice has served me quite well for over 30 years.
Looking forward to reading
Looking forward to reading these book reviews – especially the suggestions for how individuals & teams can use the learnings within them!