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Memory techniques So, open that uninspiring textbook... and here we go: Get active……Get creative Don’t just read the text over and over. That’ll never work. Let your brain play with the material, in as many ways as you can. Make notes, figure out the key points and how they link together. Drawing a spider diagram or mind map can help to clarify how everything connects. Boil those endless paragraphs into nuggets of information. This will help you to understand the subject in a deeper way than by just reading it. And it’s enjoyable, which means you’ll be more energised... Explain it to someone else... If you can explain a concept to someone else and field any follow-up questions they have, then you’ll know you’ve understood it. This also prompts your brain to work with the material in a new way, which will help to lodge it in your long-term memory. And if your friend asks you a question you can’t answer, how great to find that out before the exam... Test Yourself Create ways of testing your knowledge as you go along. This forces your brain to practise retrieving the information from its memory banks. If you’re sitting exams, get your hands on as many past papers as possible, so that you can put your new knowledge to the crucial test – do you know enough to convince an examiner? Rehearse it Your brain has a massive memory bank, but unlike a computer, it needs you to go over new information several times for it to really sink in. Creating a new memory involves a new pathway being laid down between brain cells, but this pathway will disappear unless it’s strengthened by being thought back over many times. Look back over what you’ve learned at the end of every study session to consolidate the memory. And have another quick look the next day, week, and month. Otherwise all your hard study will slip through your neurons like water through a sieve... Sleep on it This is the easy one. Learn the stuff, then go to bed. Or even just take a nap, not during lessons though! Either way, your brain will rehearse the information but without any effort from your conscious self... Studies show that recall really does improve after you sleep and similarly, marks go down if you don’t get enough sleep. More about what goes on in your brain while you’re learning, watch Meet Your Brain at: www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/brainsmart/brain Avoid Cramming According to Bjork (2001), studying materials over a number of session's gives you the time you need to adequately process the information. Research has shown that students who study regularly remember the material far better than those who do all of their studying in one marathon session. Chunking Information is organized in memory in related clusters. You can take advantage of this by structuring and organizing the materials you are studying. Try grouping similar concepts and terms together, or make an outline of your notes and textbook readings to help group related concepts. Chunking breaks up long strings of information into units or chunks. The resulting chunks are easier to commit to working memory than a longer and uninterrupted string of information. Often students use Bullet points to break up information. Socialise Study with your friends. Do a “text test” with them, exchanging short questions and short answers. Students quizzing each other is often much more successful in memorising for a test. However, make sure you stay focussed, as the social nature of studying together can deteriorate into hanging out rather than studying, so try and have a good mixture of fun and learning. In addition to the verbal and interactive components of memorisation, another person’s perspective on what is important to remember can be very useful. Encourage deeper processing Go beyond simple memorisation! Difficulty with Working Memory can occur because you have merely heard or seen something without fully processing it. One strategy to promote deeper processing is thinking aloud. Instead of reading text in your head, find two or three main points to read out loud. If group studying, discuss these points with other classmates. Practice this type of “talking aloud” to connect, reflect, and deepen an understanding of the material you study. Discussion of what someone has read or heard often stimulates more thinking about it than simply re-reading it. Association or emotional attachment Try to connect an emotion to something you want to remember. For example, if you’re trying to remember information for a history test, consider how you might have felt if you were in that setting and connect that emotion to what you’re trying to remember. Studies suggest that if you can make a meaningful connection emotionally to something, or attach a strongly held opinion to what you are trying to remember, you are more likely to commit that information to memory. Sometimes it might be useful to generate an emotional response, such as finding a reason to be angry about a historical event or to think of something that is scary about a scientific fact.