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Start on the first day of class.
NOW, here's more on how you can LEARN AS YOU GO....
And while you're taking the test...
Then
AFTER an exam or quiz:
compiled
by Joyce Woodford, Counseling Services, KSU
09/98
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FLASHCARDS AS AN AID TO MEMORY
Much of studying involves the remembering of different kinds of
information. In courses where there are large amounts of FACTUAL
information, the use of flashcards may be helpful. Kinds of material
that might be considered appropriate for flashcards are vocabulary
words, formulas, equations, definitions, dates, names, etc.
The primary advantage of flashcards over other review techniques is that since the cards are more conveniently carried, they will probably be reviewed more often than material in a notebook or a textbook. FREQUENT REVIEW of cards is what makes them effective. Short reviews FREQUENTLY REPEATED will generally be more effective than long sessions of cramming.
Objections about flashcards usually state that "they take too long to make." One should keep in mind, however, that the writing down of the material on the cards is an aid to memory in itself. One learns while preparing the cards!
SUGGESTIONS FOR MAKING AND USING FLASHCARDS - Use the 3 x 5 card plan to learn new terms/words:
The example shows a typical card:
Side 1:
|
exorbitant |
just the word |
Side 2
| eg-zor' be-tent
adjective (1)extravagant (2) excessive The prices on this menu are exorbitant. |
pronumciation symbols
meaning your sentence using it |
You can use the same method with any information you wish to learn. Place the concept or formula to be learned on one side and the definition or explanation on the other. This will allow you to TEST YOURSELF each time the cards are reviewed.
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Several factors aid memory; consider how you might apply them for yourself.
Careful attention insures better memory. Do you think jumpers find it hard to learn how to use a parachute? Find something in a subject to keep you interested.
A map, chart, or outline structures memory in the present and future tense.
"He hears what he wants to hear," indicates the effect of selective listening. The person or idea which is recalled usually has something special which made him/it stand out.
Consider parts of a conversation you listen to carefully or completely space out. Which will be most likely remembered?
Association of new facts and old is one sure way to build memory. If there's no old, the new will "catch" much more slowly. Also, this emphasizes the import of review.
Why do we remember songs on the radio so well? Of course, we hear them over and over. When we ask questions about a strange word in a song (or lecture) we are even more likely to remember.
Pulling together new learning makes it more memorable. If we recognize that the person in the red hat and the person who lives on the corner are the same person, the association aids later recall.
How often have you learned how to fix machinery, cook a meal, or play a game, only to forget the process later on. Drill is boring but rewarding.
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Several ways of coding words or numbers can help organize and retain
them. Three methods, the Loci system, Peg words, and Visual Mapping
are illustrated below. Try one method, check yourself on a scratch
sheet, and see how well you do.
1. Loci:
Loci means places. Imagine a set of locations familiar to you (houses on your block, spots around your room). These fixed points (set places and sequence) identify your terms. For instance:
Tennis Terms:
love, fault
deuce, net
add, smash
lob, match
2. Peg Words:
Ten or more "standard words" to associate terms by establishing
images can act as "pegs". Try and connect the term below
with its peg in some mental image.
| Pegs | Terms to be remembered |
|
motivated interest selectivity intention to remember basic background meaningful organization recitation/questioning consolidation distributed practice |
3.
Visual Mapping:
Since information is condensed to a few ideas in mnemonics, care
must be taken to learn their meanings prior to memorizing their
place.
Example: Pol. Sci.: Checks and balances in the political structure
| Executive | Legislative | Judicial |
| Veto | Law Making | Interpret or |
| Enforce | Law writing | Review Laws |
| 1 | Declare | 1 |
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HOW TO MEMORIZE OTHER THAN ROTE
The ex-basketball star Jerry Lucus was also a Phi Beta Kappa at
Ohio State. He attributes his scholastic prowess to a memory system
he developed. Lucus and Harry Lorayne (a memory expert) wrote The
Memory Book (Scarborough House, Brair Manor, N.Y., 1974). The following
is a partial summary of their book.
Try to construct individual words using all of the consonants assigned the various digits of the number, or attempt to make phrases where the first letter of each word represents a consonant assigned to a digit.