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Temporal Spacing of Learning: Can It Help Reduce Forgetting? Hal Pashler University of California, San Diego Dept of Psychology
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Douglas Rohrer, USF John Wixted, UCSD Nicholas Cepeda, UCSD & Univ of Colorado Shana Carpenter, UCSD
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Michael Mozer, Univ of Colorado Computer Science Dept. Ed Vul, MIT
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Forgetting: A Classic Topic in Experimental Psychology
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Forgetting in K-12 Education Educational failure may often reflect forgetting as well as absence of initial mastery. Summer Vacation Set-backs “Regression” to partial understanding and initial misunderstandings (Bob Siegler).
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“People who went to college can tell you what they learned in just 5 minutes. So, at my college, students learn just the same stuff – all in 5 minutes.” Father Guido Sarducci’s 5-Minute College
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Our Research Aim: Identify procedures that can readily be applied in educational contexts. reduce rate of forgetting
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2. Temporal Distribution of Study Sessions 4. Form and Timing of Feedback 1. Temporal Distribution of Practice within Study Sessions 3. Overlearning Topics 5. Testing Effects
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Analyzing Temporal Distribution of Study Sessions Time Study Something Once Study It Again Test Inter-study Interval (ISI) Retention Interval (RI) Scarcely any application in classroom or instructional technology Huge Literature showing poor learning with very short ISI (“spacing effect”)
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Why no practical translation if the literature is so huge? 425 papers
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Spacing Research with Significant Retention Intervals (> 1 day) 14 papers (Many with serious methodological problems)
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10-day Retention Interval Study Jani?Horse Interstudy Interval = 0, 1, 2, 4, 7, 14 days Tasks Swahili-English Vocabulary Session 1: Study to Criterion [0,1,2,4,7, or 14 days] Session 2: Fixed amount of further study [10 day RI] Session 3: Test
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Facts Objects 10-day RI Data from 182 subjects tested for 3 sessions
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6-Month Retention Interval ? Coccolith. Interstudy Interval = 0, 1, 7, 28, 84, or 168 days Tasks 1. Learn names of little-known objects 2. Learn little-known facts Who invented snow golf?Rudyard Kipling.
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6-month RI: Facts Swahili10-day RI 6-month RI: Object Names Data from 161 subjects tested for 3 sessions
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Optimum ISI = 10 – 20% of retention interval? Let’s Plot Performance as a Function of ISI/RI Ratio
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Larger Experiment now in Progress RI = {7, 35, 70, or 350 days} ISI = {0, 7, 14, 21, or 105 days} X Web-based Learning of Facts Session 1: Train to Criterion Session 2: 2 Test/Study Repetitions Test: Recall, then 5-Alternative Recognition
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Recall Data (n ~ 2,000 subjects) 7 days RI 35 days RI 70 days RI 350 days RI
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Recognition Data (n ~ 2,000 subjects) 7 days RI 35 days RI 70 days RI 350 days RI
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Large effects of spacing generalize to learning novel mathematical problem-solving skill (combinatorics) [USF] Generalizing Beyond Fact & Vocabulary Learning Pattern-recognition skills may not show similar spacing effects [www.learnmelanoma.org]
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Empirical Conclusions Using ISI of about 10-20% of retention interval seem to optimize memory over a wide time range Too short an ISI is much worse than too long Using appropriate inter-study interval can produce 100% - 200% improvement in ultimate memory
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To determine optimum spacing, you need to know how long you want the learner to retain the information. For most educational goals, 6-mo. delayed reviews likely to be very cost-effective (Preuss School Study) Cumulative finals probably have huge effect on what students retain over years. Tentative Practical Implications
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