Effective learning takes much less time if you “study smart.” To “study smart,” you need to approach learning in a deliberate way. To study smart, think about the strategies and tactics you need to be using to master a learning challenge. Be aware of any need to change strategies and tactics that are not working well for you.
Best learning occurs during lectures and videos if you make it a point to be alert and aware. The best approach is to think about what you are trying to memorize. Ask yourself questions about the information, such as:
·
What
is missing that would be useful to know?
·
What
do I not understand?
·
Where
can I get this explained better?
·
How
can I apply this information to what I already know, to other parts of the
course, to other courses, and to different kinds of problems?
·
What
new ideas does this give me?
Think about the information in different ways, in other contexts. Think about how the information relates to what you thought you already knew. What is new about it that you need to incorporate into your knowledge arsenal?
Readings
Anybody old enough to be taking these lessons on improving
learning and memory knows how to read. Right? Not necessarily. First, we have
to address how students are taught the mechanics of reading. Significant
numbers of people were not taught phonics, which was the traditional way of
teaching literacy for hundreds of years in almost all languages. Then some
educators thought learners could just skip the phonics stage and move directly
to “whole-language.” The basic idea of whole language reading is to prevent
learners from breaking down sounds in a word individually, but to fix the eyes
on whole words and associate them with prior knowledge.
I think that the correct way to literacy is to begin first
with phonics. Then as learners master the sounds of the alphabet, they can
sound out strange words and decode their meaning. Once phonics is learned,
whole language becomes a way to read words, rather than consciously sounding
out each syllable. The International Reading Association (IRA) has supported
the inclusion of phonics in the whole language approach to literacy.
Actually, this still leaves the problem of plodding along
one word at a time. Optimal reading requires clusters of multiple words at a
time, speeding the amount of material accessed. Thinking about word clusters
imparts linguistic meaning faster and better than plodding through one word
after another.
To see word clusters properly, you need to train you eyes to
pop along from one fixation point in a line to the next point to the right,
then the next, and so on. You might not know that everything the eyes see,
whether it is text or nature scenes, results from quick snaps of eye movement
from one fixation target to another. These quick jumps are called saccades. The
trick is to expand the size of the visual target that is seen with each snap,
that is, increase the number of words you see at each snap of the eyes from
fixation point to the next fixation point. Just by trying to do this, you can
increase the number of words seen at each fixation. At first it may just be one
or two words. Soon, your eyes will take in four or five words with each snap of
the eyes. This kind of training requires deliberate practice, but if you think
hard about what you are trying to do, it starts to become automatic. Good
readers take in a whole line of text in a book, for example, in two to three
eye snaps. Tests show that readers with average reading speed can double or
triple their reading speeds with no loss of comprehension.
Key points to remember:
·
Preview
the reading material to get a feel for what it is like. Note the heading and subheadings. Think about
the overall scope of what is covered and not covered.
·
Think
about your purpose ahead of time. Ask yourself, “What am I supposed to get out
of this reading?” “What am I supposed to understand and remember.”
·
Skim
first, looking for the paragraphs that matter the most. The first and last
sentences in a paragraph usually provide the best clues as to which paragraph
is most important.
·
Make
yourself interested in what you must read. You punish yourself by allowing boredom.
·
Adjust
your pace according to the denseness and difficulty of information.
·
Try
to reduce the number of times you skip back to re-read. If this is a problem,
work on your concentration and focus. Don’t let you mind wander when you read.
Definitely, do not multi-task.
·
At
first you may want to move your finger or a pointer underneath each line to
guide your eye snaps. But as you practice and get better, try to eliminate this
crutch.
·
Do
not move tongue or lips to simulate saying the words inside your head. If you
tend to do this, make it a point to hold the tip of your tongue against the
roof of your mouth.
·
At
each eye snap, THINK about what the words, as a group, mean.
·
Make
sure you actually see all the words at each fixation point. If you can’t see
all the words at each fixation, decrease the number of words you expect to
register until you get better at this.
·
As
you realize you are getting better at these eye snaps, increase the speed of
snapping.
·
Pause
from time to time to reflect on what you just read. Ask yourself to recall the
information you just read. Ask yourself how you could and should use the
information. Ask yourself how the information fits you existing knowledge and
understanding. Ask yourself what you still do not understand? Ask yourself what
information you need or want that has not been covered yet.
·
When
you finish, DO SOMETHING with what you just read. Self-quiz. Write notes.
Report to others what you just read. Use the information in a different way.
If you search on the web for “learning how to speed read,” you will find numerous explanations of how to improve reading mechanics. There are even computer apps that help train your eyes attend rapidly presented words, one at a time in rapid succession. See the review of 10 of these apps at https://bookriot.com/best-speed-reading-apps/. Many apps use the RSVP method in which words are presented at a preset speed. Sprint has a free browser based trainer that allows you to increase the number of words presented each time, which helps you learn how to expand the size of the visual field. However, this method fails to teach you how to snap your eyes across a minimum number of fixation points per line of text (see video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmDMrxUSXKY). I have not found any apps that train you to do what really matters: snap your eyes appropriately across each line of text and engage larger and larger visual fields with each snap.
Lectures
Many of the thinking aspects mentioned above for reading
apply also to learning from lectures or on-line videos. Lectures and videos may
demand more attentiveness that reading because it is not so easy to slow things
down or pause or go back to reconsider information that did not register well.
To help information register more effectively, it helps to do some advanced
preparation. Good teachers may give you a reading assignment related to the
lecture. The more you learn from this pre-reading material, the more you will
comprehend and remember from the lecture.
This brings up the
point that the goal for lectures or videos is to learn as much as you can at
the time. You may not get a second exposure to an unrecorded lecture. A classroom
environment presents a special challenge. Once there, you are more or less
trapped and your time is pre-committed. As long as you are in class, you might
as well bring your A-game so you get the most out of your time commitment.
Students who are charged up, fully expecting to aim to remember everything
presented in class, are the most likely to remember the most. Be as engaged in
discussion if it is allowed. In my experience both as a student and an
instructor, I have found the best kind of engagement is asking good questions
silently to yourself or of the teacher when questions are solicited. Asking
good questions requires deep thinking and deep thinking is the best kind of
memory rehearsal. Such thinking and the Q&A that follow obviously can help
understanding.
Everything learned in class is something you don’t have to study much after class. Besides, being fully engaged in classroom activities makes class more interesting —certainly more useful.
Get “up” for class, expecting to remember everything.
It should go without
saying that you need to be rested. Sleep is vastly more important for learning
than you probably realize. Not only does being rested keep you from wasting
your time by dozing in class, but memory of what was presented in class is
largely consolidated that night as you sleep.
Students should take
notes during the lecture or watching a video. But in my experience, they get
little good advice on how to take notes. Perhaps this is a good time to re-read
lesson 5 on note taking. Note-taking is the standard process whereby
information is transferred from the teacher’s notes to the student’s notes
(sometimes without passing through the mind of either). The problem is that
students are too busy writing notes and not busy enough thinking about what the
teacher says and means. Good teachers hand out note outlines before class so students
can pay attention to the lecture and get engaged with
Such “skeleton notes,”
give the student freedom to leave out things they already know or can figure
out. This approach really pays off when it comes time to study for exams.
Note taking should be minimal. Follow the principles given for reading. The idea is to think about what is being said, asking yourself or the teacher questions, expressing the ideas in your own terms, making mental images, and so on. What do you do in case you miss some key information while doing all this thinking? If the teacher permits, use a tape recorder and use variable speed, so you can slow down for difficult parts and speed up through parts that are not particularly useful.
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