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Friday, February 1, 2013 1. Chapter 7 Note-Taking Guide 2. What is a Memory? 3. Three Types of Memories • Learning Target: Learn what the three types of memories are and understand the differences between them. 4. Exit Slip: Graphic Organizer Chapter 7 Pre/Post Reading Due Monday 2/4 (This is a MANDATORY assignment) Monday, February 4, 2013 1. Collect Chapter 7 Pre-Post Reading Assignment 2. Review: Write down one NEW memory and what type you think it is 3. Discuss the three processes of memory • Learning Targets: Learn what the three PROCESSES of memory are. • Learn what the three STAGES of memory are. 4. Discuss the three stages of memory Chapter 7 Graphic Organizer (last page of notes) Due Wednesday 2/6 (This is an optional assignment) Chapter 7 Quest Friday, February 8 Tuesday, February 5, 2013 National Weatherman’s Day 1. Discuss Short-Term Memory 2. List demonstration 3. Discuss Long-Term Memory and Memory Tasks • Learning Target: Learn what the three STAGES of memory are and how information moves from one stage to another Chapter 7 Graphic Organizer (last page of notes) Due Wednesday 2/6 (This is an optional assignment) Chapter 7 Quest Friday, February 8 Wednesday, February 6, 2013 1. Discuss types of forgetting 2. Talk about different ways to improve memory • Learning Target: Learn about different types of forgetting and tactics to improve memory. 3. Which work best? Chapter 7 Review Due Friday 2/8 (This is an optional assignment) Chapter 7 Quest Friday, February 8 Thursday, February 7, 2013 •Review Activities: 1. Card Matches 2.Gallery Walk •Learning Target: Review the terms and concepts of Memory Chapter 7 Review Due Friday 2/8 (This is an optional assignment) Chapter 7 Quest Friday, February 8 STUDY! (Use those memory aids!!) Friday, February 6, 2013 •Collect Review worksheet •Chapter 7 Quest Chapter 7 Memory Memory •The Process by which we recollect events, general knowledge, and skills that we have learned •Three kinds of memory: 1.Episodic 2.Generic 3.Procedural 1. Episodic Memory • A memory of a specific event that was experienced first-hand • What you ate for dinner last night • What you learned in class yesterday A Flashbulb Memory is a type of episodic memory that is remembered in great detail and is meaningful in some way http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evj6q0 eCdd8 2. Generic Memory • General Knowledge • We usually don’t remember when we learned it • The first president of the United States • The color of the sky • Do you remember the day that you learned the alphabet? Probably not 3. Procedural Memory • Skills or Procedures that you have learned • Swimming • Typing • Solving an algebraic equation PEG is Kind! •Procedural •Episodic •Generic •Kinds of Memory! Three Processes of Memory 1. Encoding 2. Storage 3. Retrieval 1. Encoding • The translation of information into a form in which it can be stored (Like typing information into a computer or putting a letter into an empty mailbox) The Process of Encoding: • First we receive information through our senses, then we convert them into codes so that they can be mentally processed • Visual Codes: a mental picture • Acoustic Codes: a sequence of sounds • Semantic Codes: represents information in terms of its meaning 2. Storage • Maintenance of information over a period of time (Like saving the information to a USB drive or closing the mailbox with the letter inside) 3. Retrieval • Locating stored information and returning it to conscious thought (Like finding the document and opening it up or opening the mailbox to retrieve the letter again) • Some information in our memory is almost impossible to forget (Like our own names) Context-Dependent Memory • Memories that are dependent on the place that they were originally learned • Examples: • Students do better on tests when they study the material in the room where they will be tested • Some students on a swim team were asked to memorize lists of words while in the pool, while others memorized them out of the water. When asked to recall the words, there was better recall in that places that they were learned • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x8ZnzjdHvI State-Dependent Memory • We also remember better when we are in the same emotional state as we were when we first learned the information Three Stages of Memory 1. Sensory memory 2. Short-term memory 3. Long-term memory 1. Sensory Memory • Immediate, initial recording of information as it enters though our senses • Icons: The mental pictures we form of visual stimuli • Iconic Memory: Snapshots- only last a fraction of a second • Eidetic Memory: Ability to remember visual stimuli over long periods of time (AKA Photographic memory) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a8YXZTlwTAU 2. Short-Term Memory •Place where information is held briefly before it is stored or forgotten •has a limited capacity, about 7 items, and a limited duration, about 30 seconds Short-Term Memory •Whenever you are consciously thinking about something, it is in your short-term memory •Examples: •When you meet someone new, and hear their name for the first time •Hearing the date of a test The Primacy and Recency Effects Primacy Effect Recency Effect •Tendency to recall the initial items in a list •Tendency to recall the last items in a list (Cat, Apple, Ball, Tree) (Arrow, Flower, Key, Shoe) Chunking • Organization of items into familiar/ manageable units • Example: phone numbers • The average person can hold a list of 7 +/- 2 items in their short-term memory • Most people can remember 5 (like a zip code) • Very few can remember more than 9 The Limits of Short-Term Memory •Look at the list of letters that are on the next slide for about 15 seconds. Then, try to write them down. XBLTSATMTVPHDX Did anyone get that? The Trick is… •Since 14 letters is difficult for most people to store in their Short-Term Memory, chunking can be applied here make it easier to remember •Instead of trying to remember 14 letters, you should first chunk the letters into a few more manageable segments X BLT SAT MTV PHD X • Short-term memory is very useful, but is only a temporary solution to the problem of remembering • You can remember the information just long enough to find a way to store it in the long term 3. Long-Term Memory • If you want to remember something for more than just briefly, you need to store it in your long-term memory • Limitless memory: our memories are FULL of information (names, dates, places, words, images, smells, tastes), and seem to have no capacity On a blank piece of paper, Name the Seven Dwarves Difficulty of Task • Was the exercise easy or difficult? • That depends on: • Whether you like the movie • How long ago you watched the movie • How distracting your environment was Now pick out the seven dwarves from the list: Grouchy Sleepy Hopeful Dopey Dumpy Grumpy Teach Doc Gabby Smiley Shy Sniffy Sneezy Bashful Snorty Wheezy Fearful Jumpy Droopy Wishful Pop Cheerful Happy Stubby Sleepy, Dopey, Grumpy, Sneezy, Happy, Doc and Bashful Did you do better on the first or second memory exercise? • Recall: Bringing something back to mind by retrieving it from your memory • Example: short answer tests • Recognition: identifying objects/ events that have been encountered before • Example: multiple choice tests • The easiest memory task • Relearning: Memory can be improved with: • Strategies to store new information in memory: • Maintenance rehearsal: repeating information over and over again to keep from forgetting it • Elaborative rehearsal: make new information meaningful by relating it to something already well known (more effective) Memory can be improved with: • Drill and Practice • How you learned the alphabet and how to count • Relating new information to things we already know • “I before E, except after C” • Make an unusual or funny association so that it will stand out in your memory • Mnemonic Devices: an acronym, phrase or jingle • HOW MANY ACRONYMS DO YOU KNOW? Mnemonic Devices • Acronyms: single word in which the letters stand for something else Acrostics: Take the first letter of each item and come up with a sentence that you can remember later • My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizzas