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<!-- start content here --><font face="Helvetica, Arial" size="3"><b>Handling Reading</b><p></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">What should you do with all of those things 
  you saved with the good intention to read them soon? You know, that stack or 
  that box of magazines, professional journals, newsletters and generally interesting 
  stuff? It is amazing how rapidly it can grow out of your reading drawer, cascade 
  down the side of the desk, and finally end up residing in stacks and boxes. 
  There is so much information available now, even before we consider all of the 
  electronic resources, that it is easy to become overwhelmed. Here are some suggestions 
  on how to keep the stacks down while staying current on key events in your field.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>Recognize Your Limitations</b></font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Depending on how severe your situation, 
  it is quite possible that you will not be able to catch up on your entire backlog. 
  If it has been sitting for six months or longer, throw it out. Once this is 
  old, even if you do find time to read it, it will no longer be current. Reading 
  piles do not age gracefully. They serve no purpose remaining unread, collecting 
  dust or making you feel guilty. In spite of the fear of not being caught up 
  with the latest information, the truth is you have survived quite well to this 
  point without it. Rather than try to catch up. It is better to start making 
  changes from today onward and create strategies for staying current.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>Evaluate</b></font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Evaluate the publications you receive by 
  asking, "What would happen if I did not get it?" "How often does it offer something 
  genuinely useful, not just interesting?" "Which periodicals offer the most information 
  in the best format?" Information is only useful if it informs you; therefore, 
  it is better to read in-depth, understand, and use three or four publications 
  than to take more, just to have them sit unread. Take the few minutes to remove 
  yourself from distribution lists and cancel subscriptions to publications you 
  rarely read.</font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>Staying Current</b></font></p>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Here are four actions you can take when 
  processing the reading stack:</font></p>
<ol>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Scan first and make a decision. Screen 
    out the nonessential. Every fact cannot be as salient as the next. When you 
    keep an item, ask how likely you are to use it again in the near future. Many 
    to-read items actually need to be thrown away.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Read it and file with related information. 
    If the material to read is short, then read it the first time you touch it, 
    and put it away immediately</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"> File the information with related material 
    unread. In-depth reading generally takes too long when it initially crosses 
    your desk. As you sort through your in-basket, skim the periodical, clip the 
    article of interest and file immediately. If your last staff meeting was discussing 
    flexible work time, when you notice an article in the Harvard Business Review 
    on engineering firms that implemented flextime, cut it out and place it in 
    the file. After you have gathered all the information and are ready to make 
    a report, then read it fully.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Route it to someone else. Routed items, 
    reports and catalogs often get sent to the wrong person. When this happens, 
    identify the correct person and send it along.</font></li>
</ol>
<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>Reading Tips:</b></font></p>
<ol>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Read the conclusion or recommendations 
    section first. Go back to the text for details only if necessary.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Highlight passages as you read. This 
    makes review time much easier.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Where appropriate, have your secretary, 
    associate or colleague highlight information prior to your initial review.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Never save a stack of items with articles 
    to be clipped later. As soon as you decide, clip the article, note the source, 
    and throw the rest of the periodical away.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">For long documents, use spot reading. 
    Read the recommendations or conclusion section first. Look for the purpose 
    of the document by reading the subject line. Note headings, captions, notations 
    under charts, graphs and first sentences of each paragraph.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Read while commuting, waiting for appointments, 
    or on airplane trips.</font></li>
  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Set aside 30 minutes twice a week to 
    read. Schedule it on your calendar if you need a reminder. Remember that getting 
    the critical reading done is better than doing none at all. </font></li>
</ol>
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