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Memory & Teaching Memory & Teaching By: Stephanie I. By: Stephanie I.

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For EDCI 500 Presentation on Memory and Teaching

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Page 1: Memory Presentation

Memory & TeachingMemory & TeachingMemory & TeachingMemory & Teaching

By: Stephanie I.By: Stephanie I.

Page 2: Memory Presentation

Importance of Knowledge in Learning

• Knowing is more than just an end product of previous learning, it also guides New Learning

• Teachers need to keep this in mind and remember that students bring previous knowledge to a new learning situation

“Knowledge and knowing are the outcomes of learning” (Woolfolk, 2007, p. 249)

Page 3: Memory Presentation

Example study of Knowledge and Learning

• A study by Recht and Leslie (1988) shows the importance of knowledge in understanding and remembering new information.

• Step 1: Junior High – identified very good or very poor readers• Step 2: Tested students on knowledge of Baseball and found

that it’s not related to reading ability• Step 3: Grouped students on abilities and knowledge

• Step 4: Student in all four groups read a passage describing a baseball game and tested various ways to see if they remember the information

• Step 5: Results of how much was Remembered from the passage:

– Poor Readers/High Baseball Knowledge > Good Readers/Low Baseball Knowledge– Poor Readers/High Baseball Knowledge = Good Readers/High Baseball Knowledge– Poor Readers/Low Baseball remembered the LEAST of all other groups

Good Readers/ High Baseball Knowledge

Good Readers/ Poor Baseball Knowledge

Poor Readers/ High Baseball Knowledge

Poor Readers/ Low Baseball Knowledge

•**POINT** A good basis of knowledge can be more important than good reading skills in understanding and remembering.

Page 4: Memory Presentation

Attention & Teaching• 1st Step in Teaching: PAY ATTENTIONPAY ATTENTION• Students cannot process info that they do not

recognize or perceive• Info has to go through the working memory

(aka: “Workbench”) where it is held temporarily and combined with knowledge from long-term memory to solve or comprehend problems

• Elaborative RehearsalElaborative Rehearsal - is how a student connects info he’s trying to remember with something he already knows

(Diagram adapted from Woolfolk, 2007, p. 256)

Page 5: Memory Presentation

Long-Term Memory = The Goal of Teaching

• Long-Term memory holds the information that you have learned well. It’s the permanent storage of knowledge

Type of Memory

Input Capicity Duration Contents Retrieval

Working Very Fast Limited Very Brief: 5-20 sec.

Words, images, ideas, sentences

Immediate

Long-Term

Relatively Slow

Practically Unlimited

Practically Unlimited

Propositional networks, schemata, productions, episodes, images

Depends on representation and organization

(Table adapted from Woolfolk, 2007, p. 257)

Page 6: Memory Presentation

Storing Information in Long-Term Memory

• The way a student learns info in the first place, strongly affects his recall later.

Elaboration

•Builds extra links to existing knowledge

•Material that is elaborated when first learned will be easier to recall•Teaching Tip: Have a student “make an idea their own” by having them translate info into their own words, create examples, explain to a peer, draw or act out a relationship, or apply the info to solve new problems

Organization

•Material that is well organized is easier to learn and to remember than bits and pieces of info

•Structure serves as a guide back to the information when it needs to be recalled•Teaching Tip: Especially for difficult or complex info – place a concept in a structure to help learn and remember both general definitions and specific examples

Context

•Aspects of physical and emotional context – places, rooms, moods, who is with us – are learned along with other info

•It is easier to recall info when the current context is similar to the original one•Teaching Tip: Help students to use context when recalling difficult information. Prompt “We discussed this two days ago in history during…” it might help trigger a memory to start the recall process

Page 7: Memory Presentation

Retrieving Information from Long-Term Memory

<<< Picture the Process:“Think of long-term memory as a huge shelf

full of tools (skills, procedures) and supplies (knowledge, schemas) ready to be brought to the workbench to accomplish a task. The shelf (long-term memory) stores an incredible amount, but it may be hard to find what you are looking for quickly. The workbench (working memory) is small, but anything on it is immediately available. Because it is small, however, supplies (bits of information) sometimes are lost when the workbench overflows or when one bit of information covers (interferes with) another.”

(Woolfolk, 2007, p. 264)

• A few ways to retrieve info:•Spreading Activation: Retrieval of pieces of information based on their relatedness to one another. Remembering one bit of information activates (stimulates) recall of associated information. •Reconstruction: A cognitive tool or problem solving process that makes use of logic, cue, and other knowledge to construct a reasonable answer by filling in any missing parts.

Now is the time for all good men to come to the aide of their country.

Page 8: Memory Presentation

Levels of Processing Activity

• Activity: To display this theory and model the importance of “Critical Thinking” Questions.

• Ask students to sort pictures of dogs.– 1st: On the basis of the color of their coats

• Results should show that students probably won’t remember too many pictures (Surface Learning)

– 2nd: Rate each dog on how likely it is to chase you when you jog

• Results should show that students will be able to recall more pictures (In-Depth Learning)

• **POINT** The 2nd rating process requires “deeper” processing and more focus on the meaning of the information. When thinking about critical questions it helps to process the information in a different way. Usually it takes connecting different strands of knowledge to solve a problem. It helps in retention of information. Not simply regurgitating facts.

• Levels of Processing, as proposed by Craik and Lockhart, is an alternative to short/long term memory models. But this theory is strongly related to the notion of elaboration.**POINT** What determines how long information is remembered is how extensively the info is analyzed and connected with other information.

Page 9: Memory Presentation

Memory TeachingTips and Techniques

1. Make it meaningful.2. Make sure to have students’ attention. (develop

signals, use gestures, move around the room)3. Begin a lesson by asking a question that stimulates

the topic.4. Help students make connections between new

information and what they already know. (Elaboration, Organization, Context)

5. Provide repetition and review of information.6. Present material in a clear and organized way.7. Focus on meaning, not memorization.8. Use Mnemonics. – Acronyms, peg-type mnemonics,

keyword method, illustrations that display meaning

Page 10: Memory Presentation

Citations

Discovering Psychology. (2001). Remembering and Forgetting. Retrieved October 10, 2008, from http://www.learner.org/resources/series138.html?pop=yes&pid=1528#

Woolfolk, A. (2007). Educational Psychology. Boston: Pearson Education.