Study
Smarter, Not More
“I studied a long time.”
“I really studied hard.”
This is what I often
hear from students when asked if they are prepared for a quiz or test. It is
not uncommon for students to equate the amount of time spent studying to effective
studying. Effective studying can take hours but it needn’t. If students spend
too much time reading over textbooks and notes they are probably wasting time
and brain energy on passive studying habits. Passive studying may result in the
memorization of facts but is unlikely to lead to the ability to understand and
apply what’s been learned – which is almost certainly what the teacher is going
to require for the test. Don’t misunderstand me: There are definitely times
when studying is about memorization, such as with multiplication tables, names
and places, definitions, and spelling words. True learning, however, involves
more than the basic retention of facts: It requires the conceptual
understanding necessary to apply knowledge to new situations.
Retained facts are
the foundation to build understanding. When students take the facts they’ve
memorized to the next level, conceptual understanding, they can then apply the
constructed framework of understanding to new situations. Understanding the
type of learning required is the key to studying smarter: Retention to memorize
facts; understanding to connect facts into a framework; application to take
this framework and apply it to new situations, activities, and information.
Retention. Studying to retain information is the simplest form of learning.
When to use it: vocabulary, spelling, multiplication table,
steps in solving equations, historical events.
Strategies for Retention. Strategies
for retention include chunking, rehearsal, categorizing, spacing, and
interleaving.
-Chunking information
into 5 or 7 items supports students’ limited working memory.
-Rehearsing, better
known as “practice makes perfect,” is done to reinforce learned material. Ideal
activities are: solving math problems repeatedly, writing out information
several times, creating and reviewing index cards for terms and vocabulary over
several sessions. Ideal rehearsal is 8 to 20 times depending on the difficulty
of the information and students’ ability.
-Categorizing
information is an excellent strategy for retention. This strategy is a special
form of chunking in which information is divided into manageable pieces and by
themes that make sense to students, e.g. dividing vocabulary by syllables,
prefixes, suffixes, nouns, verbs, adjective, etc.
-Spacing study
sessions over several days strengthens the retrieval connections in the brain.
When information travels the brain pathways over and over, it is increasingly
easier to recall.
-Interleaving
supports focused attention and the brains need for novelty. Researchers have
found that students’ ability to remain focused during studying is enhanced when
students mix practice of several related skills. are divided into 20-30
minuteduring st on memory
Understanding. Developing a framework for linking facts results in understanding how
information fits together and why.
When to use it: In all subjects
to recognize main ideas and compare/contrast concepts
Strategies for understanding. Students
can develop their understanding by teaching others what they know, create
essential questions and respond to them during reading, and/or connect ideas
using visual organizers/mind-maps.
-Teaching others what
you know requires students to develop a organize information and deliver it
with precise vocabulary.
-Essential questions
is an active reading strategy whereby students turns all section headings in a
text into questions. After reading, students answer the essential questions
with information contained within each section.
-Visual
organizers/mind maps help students visualize the connections between
characters, ideas, processes, timelines, ect.
Application.
Applying facts and concepts to new situations,
activities, and information is the ultimate aim of learning. Application
depends on having a solid foundation of facts and understanding.
When to use it: All subjects
provide opportunities to apply retained and understood knowledge by using
skills in real situation or projects
Strategies for application. Application strategies include the processes
for solving word problems/real world problems.
-processes
- find data that
supports hypothesis.
Studying
Smarter is more than just “doing.” Studying smarter
requires students to have thought in advance about why, where, how, when, and
what they study. They have established routines for preparing to learn and
during learning. Routines can include when and where the studying
takes place, prioritizing what is studied, and identifying what, how and
why strategies are used. And most importantly, routines are established
for ensuring the brain is ready to engage in learning.
References
Akyürek, E., Kappelmann, N. , Volkert, M. & Van Rijn, H. (2017).
What you see is what you remember: Visual chunking by temporal integration
enhances working memory. Journal of
Cognitive Neuroscience, .29(12), pp.2025-2036.
Birnbaum, M. Kornell, N. Bjork, E. & Bjork, R. (2013). Why
interleving enhances inductive learning: The roles of discrimination and
retrieval. Memory & Cognition, 41(3),
pp.392-402.
Bude, L., Imbos, T., Van De Wiel, M. & Berger, M. (2011). The
effect of distributed practice on students’ conceptual understanding of
statistics. The International Journal of
Higher Education and Educational Planning,.62(1), p.69-79.
Carvalho, P. & Goldstone, R., (2014). Effects of interleaved and blocked
study on delayed test of category learning generalization. Frontiers in Psychology, 5.
Haggart, W. &
Juhasz, C. (2002). Homework and Kids: A Parent’s Guide. Arlington: Performance Learning Systems.
Kurniawati, A. & Paidi (2018). The influences of peer tutoring
method to improve conceptual understandin. Journal
of Physics: Conference Series,1097.