Invitation to Psychology

(Barry) #1

290 ChaPteR 8 Memory


students learned words in foreign languages,
once a student had learned a word it was (a)
repeatedly studied but dropped from further
testing, (b) repeatedly tested but dropped from
further studying, or (c) dropped from study-
ing and testing. To the surprise of the students
themselves, studying after learning had no effect
on their subsequent ability to recall the foreign
words. But repeated testing, which caused them
to repeatedly retrieve the words from memory,
had a large benefit (Karpicke, 2012; Karpicke &
Roediger, 2008). So when your professors and
your textbook authors want to keep quizzing
you, it’s only for your own good!

Active Studying
(Read-Recite-
Review)

Elaborative
Rehearsal

Deep
Processing

Retrieval Practice


Practice

Processing

Effortful

Effective Encoding


HOW TO REMEMBER BETTER

Remembering the Strategies
for Learning
The very first learning strategy we introduced
in Chapter 1 was the 3R method—read, recite,
review—and we have helped you use it by
building it into every one of our quizzes in this
book. Now might be a good time to go back
and—you guessed it—review the other strate-
gies. They work because they encourage you
to process deeply, to use your imagination, to
use elaborative rehearsal, to test yourself, and
to think about what you are hearing or reading.
And they all have something important in com-
mon: They teach you to be an active rather than
a passive learner. Your memory isn’t a sponge
that simply soaks up whatever is poured on it.
Having a good memory requires you to trans-
form new information into something you can
understand, use, and retrieve when you most
need it.

Suppose that you are studying the con-
cept of working memory. Simply memorizing
the definition is unlikely to help much. But if
you can elaborate the concept, you are more
likely to remember it. The word working should
remind you that working memory is involved
in tasks that require effort and attention. And
effort and attention are related to the ability
to concentrate, resist distraction, and therefore
solve problems. Many students try to pare down
what they are learning to the bare essentials, but
knowing more details about something in fact
makes it more memorable; that is what elabora-
tion means.
A related strategy for prolonging retention
is deep processing, or the processing of meaning
(Craik & Lockhart, 1972). If you process only
the physical or sensory features of a stimulus,
such as how the word hypothalamus is spelled
and how it sounds, your processing will be shal-
low even if it is elaborated. If you recognize
patterns and assign labels to objects or events
(“Hypo means ‘below,’ so the hypothalamus must
be below the thalamus”), your processing will
be somewhat deeper. If you fully analyze the
meaning of what you are trying to remember
(perhaps by encoding the functions and impor-
tance of the hypothalamus), your processing will
be deeper yet. For some kinds of information,
shallow processing is useful; when you memorize
a poem, you will want to pay attention to (and
elaborately encode) the sounds of the words
and the patterns of rhythm in the poem and
not just the poem’s meaning. Usually, though,
deep processing is more effective. That is why,
if you try to memorize information that has
little  or no meaning for you, the information
may not stick.

Retrieval Practice
Many students think that the way to remember
course material for an exam is simply to study it
once thoroughly, or maybe twice. Unfortunately,
within just a few weeks or months after the
exam—or even before it—some of those answers
will have vanished like steam on a bathroom mir-
ror. Retrieval practice, the repeated retrieval of an
item of information from memory, is necessary if
a memory is to undergo consolidation and remain
available for a long time. After all, that’s the goal
of learning.
In a college course, a good way to ensure
retrieval practice is to take short quizzes after
you have learned some material but before the
big exam. In a series of experiments in which

deep processing In the
encoding of information,
the processing of mean-
ing rather than simply the
physical or sensory fea-
tures of a stimulus.

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