 As a researcher, I spend a lot of time specifying my research questions. These questions are central to my study and guide the way I shape my literature review, select appropriate methods, and collect and analyze data. A reading strategy I find valuable for this process is using key research questions to guide my reading. To accomplish this, I reframe section headings as research questions to ensure that I pull the most relevant information from whatever source I am reading. For example, since I study how various youth use social media, I might reframe a textbook section heading titled Use Social Media Use as How do youth in different communities use social media? I keep this question in mind as I work through the chapter, so that by the end, I have the information that most clearly applies to the study, course paper, or project I am working on based on my central questions and topics of interest. I like this strategy because it helps me parse the broader areas of a specific subject and encourages close reading for the areas most relevant to my interest or an assignment focus. In the short time that I've used this strategy, I've found myself not only reading faster, but also in a more focused way.