Give you a method, which I think is efficient, as follows.
Choose a test paper, which can be a college entrance examination question or a simulation question.
For each question on the test paper, the purpose is to study the words of the question, not the number and speed of doing it.
The words in these topics constitute the topic, express the meaning of the topic and provide the topic information. When you can read the topic, you will know how to do it. Reading is not a superficial literacy problem, but something that can be associated with words. These related things can be done through simple processing.
The reason why you can't do the problem now is that you can't relate things through the problem. On the one hand, the study of subject words is to improve their thinking ability, on the other hand, it is to accumulate association points. With the association point, your thinking ability is improved and the problem is naturally solved.
There is a quick way to interpret the topic, that is, to understand the topic by comparing the answer with the topic. The answer is not a bad thing. Don't exclude him. The teacher's answer will produce dependence psychology, and this training method is invalid, because the purpose of reading the answer is to understand the topic, accumulate association points and learn the thinking of the answer. These things are derived from the answers and finally reflected in your mind. The trigger point in the exam is not to find the answer, but to call the association accumulated through the answer.
What you have to do is to find the corresponding relationship between sentences and sentence combinations, the relationship between sentences, and the information implied in sentences and answers by comparing answers and questions, and see how the information related to these sentences is embodied and used in the answers. For some sentences, the answers tell you where the relevant points are and how to deal with them. This is the most effective and quickest way to improve reading questions and solve problems. I hope you can adopt and use these exercises.