Why you should try a live reading session

post by Nihal M (nihal-m) · 2021-06-26T08:30:25.591Z · LW · GW · 2 comments

Contents

  What is a live reading session
  How I run them
  What makes it work
    Active discussions
    Lower Barrier of Entry
  Lessons I've picked up
  Caveats and Considerations
  Conclusion
None
2 comments

For the last 8 months, I've been running live reading sessions with some of my friends, co-workers, and members of the local SSC/LW group. In this post I wish to share some of my findings on it's effectiveness, advantages and potential failure points

What is a live reading session

I was inspired by this tweet to try out the deep reading sessions mentioned. The basic format is as follows:

I'm calling them "live reading" sessions instead of "deep reading" sessions as I believe the killer feature is the process of "reading live" with others. 

How I run them

I took the basic idea from the tweet, and have run three independent groups doing reading sessions on a regular basis. All the groups are still active, and my week is filled with 4-6 hours of these sessions. 

I have modified the original formula for all these groups based on the group dynamics and with the goal of having continuously active sessions. The main difference is not having live annotations/highlighting.

What makes it work

Active discussions

  1. I've run SSC/LW meetups which discuss some of Scott's essays and not everyone in the group was able to participate at the same level. Among other reasons, this was also due to different people not recalling parts of the essay or major points of the essay. Partial recall deters conversations, and having the essay read moments earlier makes it very easy for people to chime in.
  2. Some discussion points that you think of while reading while reading are not necessarily present or remembered after the whole essay is read. Having the discussion much earlier in the pipeline from reading--->recall--->discussion  is much more unfiltered.

Lower Barrier of Entry

In a typical reading club, people are expected to do homework of reading a specified section beforehand (Which is perfectly reasonable), so that all the time is devoted to discussion. From my experience in trying and failing to sustain such reading clubs, I've noticed that not everyone reads beforehand and tends to skip the session not having done their homework. i believe this shouldn't deter them from having discussions on it, and live reading is a more welcoming format. Lowering barrier of entry is a nice thing to do when people don't have to do any homework.

If all you have to do is show up, more people participate.

Lessons I've picked up

Caveats and Considerations

Conclusion

Live reading sessions are a tweaked format of traditional book clubs which can work effectively for clubs which might have previously failed, and have a high attrition rate. If you're planning to start one, I highly recommend it. It has worked well for multiple settings, and has increased my general intake of literary content while also increasing my engagement with said content. 

2 comments

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comment by Dustin · 2021-06-26T18:52:02.104Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Am I alone in being irritated by having someone read something to me?

I'm not sure what it is exactly but I think a lot of it is out-loud reading is just so much slower than my own reading-to-myself speed.  The feeling is similar to, but not exactly the same as, when watching a not-computer-literate person using a computer or watching other people play a video game.

Replies from: nihal-m
comment by Nihal M (nihal-m) · 2021-06-27T09:00:32.286Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

You're not alone. I know people who've tried this technique, and preferred to read things by themselves instead. 

For those who don't mind, and want to have a social reading habit, this can be a potentially useful format.