What's the best way to study (aka learn) for this class?
What is learning?
learn
gain or acquire knowledge of or skill in (something) by study, experience, or being taught.
archaic: to teach someone
In other words, to form a accessible and useful memory.
What is memory?
Working Memory
Some times called short-term memory
Relies on sensory memory and episodic buffer
Stores small amounts of information for short periods of time until it is either encoded or forgotten.
Long-term memory
Stores of information for an extended period, can be recalled at a later time for use (encoding).
Has a "shelf-life."
Multifaceted
Implicit vs. explicit
Declarative vs. procedural
Episodic vs. semantic
Stages of Memory
Encoding
Storage & Consolidation
Retrieval
Forgetting
Encoding
This is the initial learning of information.
Factors that influence it include:
Distinctiveness/level of detail
Elaboration (how linked it is with pre-existing knowledge).
Self-reference effect
Frequency
Storage
A physical reorganization occurs in the brain, resulting in a pattern of neural organization that stores the information.
This is somewhat understood, but we don't need to get into it today.
Retrieval
When needed the information is recalled for use.
Encoding Specificity Principle
Retrieval cues like smells, sights, sounds, locations or associations with other memories.
Retrieval-practice effect
Testing effect
Distributed practice
Forgetting
Yes, it happens
"Neurons that fire together, wire together"
Neuronal firing initiates a process that prevents circuit degradation.
Memory representations that are used often and in multiple contexts are the most accurate, stable and expert.
"Use it or lose it"
Memory representations that aren't used decay and rewired for other uses.
Preserves energy efficiency of brain.
Applied to this class:
We are looking for:
Optimized encoding
Effective storage
Faster recall
If you cram
This course
You
Space out your learning
Study for a little bit every day, rather than cramming in one long session.
Start studying early, and touch on each topic during each study session.
Reading before class and reviewing lecture notes after class will help consolidate what was covered in class
Learn more by testing yourself
Read-recite-review: Instead of writing a chapter summary as you read, write down what you remember after you read, recalling the details from memory. Then, check to see how well you did.
Answer the “end-of-chapter” questions both before and after you read a chapter.
Practice retrieval via flash cards. Put answers you missed back in the deck at an early place and the ones you got right at the end. Finally, aim to recall each item correctly multiple times before taking a card out of the deck.
Be skeptical about what you think you know—test yourself to make certain you know it!
Maximize class time
Attend every class session.
Leave your smartphone/tablet/laptop in your backpack.
Use the course pack for notes.
Be an active reader
These books are golden!
Instead of speeding through your reading, slow down and aim for understanding.
highlighting ≠ active reading.
use the Objectives
Ask yourself questions as you read, such as, “What did I learn on this page?” and “What on this page is new to me?”
Finally, write some of your own questions about tricky concepts: “What is an example of X in real life?” or “How is Theory X different from Theory Z?”
General tips
Get organized early in the semester. Block out study times now!