Improving learning through effective revision. https://www.wku.edu/senate/documents/improving_student_learning_dunlosky_2 013.pdf.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How to pass exams. Memory skills are vital to passing exams Linear exams at GCSE and A Level focused on extended recall More content in curricula from.
Advertisements

Agenda What is revision? The three steps to successful revision
Misery loves company Opposites attract Absence makes the heart grow fonder Familiarity breeds contempt You can’t teach an old dog, new tricks Actions speak.
Joyet Why Cornell Notes? Cornell Notes are a requirement in Mr. Joyet’s classroom, either during a Power Point presentation; straight lecture; student,
Preparing for Major Tests: Developing a Five Day Study Plan
T&L HUB MEETING 12 th January 2015 Revision Skills.
Improve Your Studying Skills
Year 11 PSHE Mind mapping Why is it so good? How can it be used for effective revision?
STUDY SKILLS.
VCE Learning. To unpack the challenge of enhancing the quality of VCE learning What does the student need to know about how to interpret the task ? Ho.
Year 11 Revision Techniques
Test Preparation STRATEGIES BASED ON MAKE IT STICK: THE SCIENCE OF SUCCESSFUL LEARNING BY PETER BROWN, HENRY ROEDIGER, AND MARK MCDANIEL POWERPOINT DEVELOPED.
How To Study To Improve Your Grades. Two Important Things Your study area is JUST as important as HOW you study. Reading over your notes is NEVER the.
Memory techniques for HISTORY exams and assessments.
Tips to Help you Study. Time management is hard for a lot of us. If you divide what you have to study into manageable chunks, it makes it a lot easier.
Ideas and techniques to help you get the most from your revision time.
Session 4: PREPARE FOR TESTS Year 7 Life Skills Student Wall Planner and Study Guide.
Dr. Cynthia Fadler Assistant Professor of Psychology Sibley Day 2014.
Y11 Parent Information Evening
Effective Revision Strategies. Know yourself and find the strategies that work for you. Do what works for you, that you know has proved successful, not.
YEAR 11 REVISION. Top exam tips Start your revision as early as possible. You need time to go over topics two or three times. Get plenty of sleep the.
Taking Notes A step-by-step guide on how to maximise your Senior School Experience.
HOW TO PASS EXAMS. AIMS THIS EVENING To encourage you as parents/guardians to become actively involved in your child’s exam preparation To share key tips.
Growth mindset & Questioning. This year’s objectives  To develop deep and probing questioning for teaching/memory that elicits students to think hard,
Improving learning through effective study skills and revision.
Homework vs Revision How do you study for a ATAR subject.
Contents This revision guide contains: Revising Throughout the Year Critical Essays Set Text Reading for Understanding, Analysis and Evaluation (RUAE)
Revision Techniques. The Statistics 66% material is forgotten after 7 days 88% material is forgotten after 6 weeks Reading notes and text books leads.
Cramming the night before your exams is NOT the best way to get your best grades… So what should you do instead? If you look at all the work you have done.
Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school. Albert Einstein.
Start early Helps with memory because it will be easier to remember small bits of information when revised little and often. Cramming lots of information.
HOW TO REVISE Use all your brain’s skills and as many senses as possible. This will be ‘active revision’.
Revision Techniques Year 11 May In exams, …
How to Revise? Find a space Where to revise? Find a space – free from distractions!
Of Mice and Men Themes Setting Characters Literary Techniques Contextual knowledge Sunlight on the Grass Themes Characters Setting Literary techniques.
Effective Revision strategies- What works and what doesn’t?
Having the right mindset
Making the Most of Independent Study (Revision Homework) Time
Strategies for Learning and Revision
“Make it Stick”- Study Strategies for Retention
Supporting Your Child’s Learning at GCSE
Trial exam information
How to learn and remember knowledge
How to improve your grade in Religious Education
Making the learning stick- effective revision strategies
Parents revision workshop
Revision Skills – Session 1
How do we revise for geography?
A beginners guide to revision; you’ll never say ‘I can’t revise’ again
How to Revise Saturday, 22 September 2018.
Revision Time for a bit of chemistry revision……
Year 11 Parents’ Revision Information Evening
Improving learning through effective revision
Revision Techniques Quantity Quality Flashcards
Parents revision workshop
Effective Revision strategies- What works?
Year 11 Advice Evening 13 September 2018 Welcome
Y11 GCSE Mock Exams Early January 2019 ‘I only know it because I’ve learnt it’
Year 11 Parents’ Evening - information
GCSE Revision In response to a large number of Y11 students asking for advice on how to revise….. Introduction & revision planning Revision techniques.
Revision Guidance Evening
Preparing for exam success
Riveting Revision? How can you revise effectively? Intro
Main points to consider
Revision techniques or are you a self manager?
Welcome to The GCSE Support Parent Evening
Some revision strategies in the run up to your exams
Did their revision work for them?
How do we revise? Flashcards Retrieval Practice Transform It
The Many Faces of Revision…
Presentation transcript:

Improving learning through effective revision

013.pdf

Not very effective

Highlighting

Re-reading

Summarising Texts

Why? Low challenge. Little thinking required. Makes the student think that they are ‘doing something’

More effective

Practice Testing This technique is pretty straightforward – keep testing yourself (or each other) on what you have got to learn. This technique has been shown to have the highest impact in terms of supporting student learning. Some ways in which you can do this easily: Create some flashcards, with questions on one side and answers on the other – and keep testing yourself. Work through past exam papers – many can be acquired through exam board websites. Simply quiz each other (or yourself) on key bits of information. Create ‘fill the gap’ exercises for you and a friend to complete. Create multiple choice quizzes for friends to complete.

Distributed Practice Rather than cramming all of your revision for each subject into one block, it’s better to space it out – from now, through to the exams. Why is this better? Bizarrely, because it gives you some forgetting time. This means that when you come back to it a few weeks later, you will have to think harder, which actually helps you to remember it. Furthermore, the more frequently you come back to a topic, the better you remember it

Elaborate Interrogation One of the best things that you can do (either to yourself or with a friend) to support your revision is to ask why an idea or concept is true – and then answer that why question. For example; In science, increasing the temperature can increase the rate of a chemical reaction….why? In geography, the leisure industry in British seaside towns like Porthcawl in South Wales has deteriorated in the last 4 decades….why? In history, the 1929 American stock exchange collapsed. This supported Hitler’s rise to power….why? So, rather than just try to learn facts or ideas, ask yourself why they are true.

Self explanation Rather than looking at different topics from a subject in isolation, try to think about how this new information is related to what you know already. This is where mind- maps might come in useful – but the process of producing the mind map, is probably more useful than the finished product. So, think about a key central idea (the middle of the mind map) and then how new material, builds on the existing knowledge in the middle. Alongside this, when you solve a problem e.g. in maths, explain to someone the steps you took to solve the problem. This can be applied to a whole range of subjects.

Interleaved Practice When you are revising a subject, the temptation is to do it in ‘blocks’ of topics. Like below:

The problem with this is, is that it doesn’t support the importance of repetition – which is so important to learning. So rather than revising in ‘topic blocks’ it’s better to chunk these topics up in your revision programme and interleave them: This means that you keep coming back to the topics. So, instead of doing a one hour block of revision on topic 1, do 15 minutes on topic 1, then 15 minutes on topic 2, then the same for topic 3 and 4.

Summary “Memory is the residue of thought”. Testing. Space it out. Keep asking ‘why’? Build on what they know. Explain their steps in problem solving.