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Speed reading guide

How to Test Your Own Reading Comprehension

8 min read

Reading speed is easy to measure — words per minute is straightforward arithmetic. Reading comprehension is harder to measure and therefore more often ignored. Most readers who claim to "speed read" have a WPM number but no comprehension measure — which means they are tracking the input side (words passing through the visual field) without tracking the output side (meaning constructed and retained).

This matters because speed without comprehension is not reading. It is word-viewing.

The free recall test: your baseline

The simplest and most ecologically valid comprehension test requires no special materials:

  1. Read a text passage of 300–500 words at your typical reading speed
  2. Close the text
  3. Wait 10–15 minutes (do something else; allow short-term memory to settle)
  4. Write down everything you remember — specific claims, examples, arguments, details

Score your recall:

This self-test is most useful when done at different WPM settings (if using RSVP) or across different text types. Your comprehension at 300 WPM for a Dostoevsky novel will be different from your comprehension at 300 WPM for a philosophy paper — and knowing this gap helps you calibrate per-domain.

The inference test

Free recall only tests what you explicitly processed. Comprehension also involves inference — understanding what a text implies but does not state. Inference capacity is harder to self-test but highly informative.

After reading a passage, ask yourself:

  1. What is the author's main argument? (Not stated explicitly — synthesised from the whole)
  2. What does the author assume is already known? (Background assumptions)
  3. What would the author's view be on a scenario not explicitly discussed in the text?
  4. What is the strongest objection to the author's argument?

Your ability to answer these questions tests higher-level comprehension — the kind assessed in GRE, LSAT, and academic reading comprehension tests, and the kind most relevant to genuinely understanding a non-fiction book.

If you find these questions hard after reading at high speed, you are reading faster than your comprehension supports for this material.

The delayed recall test

The free recall test immediately after reading measures short-term comprehension. What matters for most reading purposes is long-term retention — what you can access a week or month later.

A more demanding comprehension test:

  1. Read a chapter or article
  2. Do not test yourself immediately
  3. Return to the same material after 48 hours or one week
  4. Without looking at the text, write down the key points
  5. Compare against the original

This test reveals how much of your immediate comprehension converted to durable memory — the gap is typically larger than readers expect, and it is the gap that spaced repetition and retrieval practice techniques are designed to close.

Calibrating RSVP speed using comprehension tests

When using warpread.app or any RSVP reader, comprehension testing enables systematic speed calibration:

  1. Read a passage at your current WPM setting
  2. Free recall test immediately after
  3. If recall is above 80%: increase WPM by 25–50 for the next passage
  4. If recall is between 70–80%: maintain current WPM
  5. If recall is below 70%: decrease WPM by 25–50

Repeat over several sessions across different material types. After 2–3 weeks of this calibration, you will have per-domain WPM settings that optimise speed-comprehension trade-off for your specific reading profile.

This is the evidence-based approach to RSVP training — not "push as fast as possible and hope comprehension follows" but "increase speed until comprehension begins to drop, then stabilise just above that threshold."

The vocabulary comprehension test

If comprehension drops consistently in specific passages, identify whether the problem is vocabulary. After a passage where comprehension was poor, review the text and identify words that were unfamiliar or required inference.

If you can identify 5 or more unfamiliar words per 1,000 words, vocabulary is almost certainly the binding constraint — you are below the 95% lexical coverage threshold needed for comfortable comprehension. See our vocabulary and reading speed guide for targeted vocabulary building strategies.

If vocabulary is adequate but comprehension still suffers, the issue is more likely working memory (for syntactically complex passages) or prior knowledge (for domain-unfamiliar material).

What good comprehension actually looks like

Some readers mistake recognition for comprehension. You can recognise text you have read — feel it is familiar, recall that you read it — while being unable to retrieve the specific claims, reasoning, or evidence. True comprehension means:

This standard is higher than most readers apply in practice. It is also the standard that makes reading genuinely useful — that converts reading time into knowledge you can actually use. Comprehension testing is the only way to know whether your reading is meeting it.

Read with comprehension tracking on warpread.app — free RSVP reader


References

Frequently asked questions

How do you measure reading comprehension?

Researchers measure reading comprehension using delayed recall tests (recalling information after a set interval), cloze tests (filling in deleted words), multiple choice questions, open-ended summaries, and inference questions. For self-assessment, the most practical approach is free recall: close the text after reading, wait 10–15 minutes, and write down as much as you can remember. Scoring the completeness and accuracy of your recall gives a direct measure of comprehension quality.

What is a good comprehension rate for speed reading?

Most researchers use 70–80% comprehension on recall or multiple-choice tests as the threshold for 'adequate' reading comprehension. Below 70%, key information is being missed. Above 80%, you are retaining a substantial majority of the material. However, the appropriate target depends on your purpose: casual fiction reading may be adequate at 60% recall; academic reading where you need to retain arguments precisely may require 85%+.

Why does comprehension drop at higher reading speeds?

Comprehension drops at higher speeds primarily because two cognitive processes are disrupted: parafoveal preview (the preview of upcoming words that supports sentence parsing) is shortened, and the time available for each fixation is reduced, meaning lexical access and sentence integration cannot fully complete. The exact WPM where comprehension begins to drop varies by individual, text difficulty, and domain familiarity.

Can you improve comprehension without slowing down?

Yes, through vocabulary building, domain knowledge development, and strategy training. Larger vocabulary means each word is processed faster (shorter fixation time), leaving more time per fixation for integration. Domain knowledge provides schemas that fill gaps automatically. Strategy training (comprehension monitoring, self-explanation, inference generation) improves the efficiency of comprehension processes, allowing the same quality at higher speeds.

Benchmark your reading performance

Turn the cognitive science into practice — take the free WPM speed test, then work through the Speed Reading Fundamentals course to build your technique.