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Dr. Cynthia Fadler Assistant Professor of Psychology Sibley Day 2014
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Some frequent answers Rereading Cramming Flash cards How do you use them? Highlighting How do you study?
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What doesn’t work For each technique: Relevant background research Why it doesn’t work What does work For each technique: Relevant background research Why it works How to use it both in and out of the classroom Dunlosky, Rawson, Marsh, Nathan, & Willingham (2013), PSPI Outline of today’s talk
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What doesn’t work
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Summarizing
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Reading a text and writing a summary in your own words Enhances gist understanding of the text Summarizing
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Undergraduates read Web units Two groups: Just read Summarize as if explaining to a friend Multiple choice, short answer, application Bednall & Kehoe, 2011 Summarizing
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Why it doesn’t work: Summarization means a lot of different things Quality of summary matters The type of material that is being summarized is an important factor Summarizing
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Highlighting
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Somehow indicating the important information in text Highlighting
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Start of studyTwo weeksTwo months 1. Read chapterStudy ch.Test 2. Highlight chapterStudy blank ch.Test 3. Highlight chapterStudy highlighted ch.Test All groups equal on fact-based questions Highlight group worst on conceptual questions Peterson, 1992 Highlighting
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Why it doesn’t work A lot of variability in type of highlighting More highlighting does not mean more retention Bad for application Highlighting
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Rereading
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Repeatedly reading the textbook, powerpoint slides, or notes Rereading
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Undergraduates read short passage 0, 1, 2, or 4 times After 10-min delay, filled in missing words from passage Rothkopf, 1968 Rereading
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Why it doesn’t work Ok, it does…. but not as well as other things you could do with your time. Appears to be a qualitative, not quantitative improvement Better with spaced than massed rereading Rereading
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What does work
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Elaboration
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Answering, “Why?” for specific facts and concepts. E.g. To-be-learned fact: Correlation does not equal causation Why?: There could be a third extraneous variable that explains the relationship. Elaboration
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Undergraduates read sentences such as: “The hungry man got into the car” 3 groups: Why did he do that? What did he do next? Just read. Final test Why: ~72% Other two groups: ~37% Pressley, McDaniel, Turnure, Wood, & Ahmad, 1987 Elaboration
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Why does it work? Supports integration of new knowledge with prior knowledge Supports organization of new information Elaboration
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Students Ask, “Why?” Think of how new facts are related to things you already know Instructors Encourage this behavior by creating “connection papers” or discussion topics Ask questions on exams that relate new concepts with earlier concepts in the course Caveat Only works if prior knowledge exists! Elaboration
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Testing
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Taking practice tests or self-testing; flashcards NOT summative assessments Testing
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Undergraduates read two passages After one, “read again” After the other, “recall as much as you can” After a delay, try to recall as much as possible 5 min, 2 days, or 1 week Roediger & Karpicke, 2006 Testing
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Roediger & Karpicke, 2006
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Why it works Direct effects Strengthen connection between question and answer Activate related information Better organization Mediated effects Metacognition Testing
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Students: Take advantage of the practice tests at the end of textbook chapters Create flashcards But don’t throw out the ones you get right! Instructors Use low-stakes quizzes in the classroom Ask lots of open-ended questions during lecture But require answers! Give early feedback Testing
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Interleaving
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Using different types of studying (e.g. re-reading, testing, etc.) and studying different materials (e.g. multiple chapters) in a single study session Interleaving
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Undergraduates learned to compute volumes of solids Group 1: Read S1, Problems S1, Read S2, Problems S2… Group 2: Read all solids, Complete all problems in random order Feedback after each problem Test 1 week later Rohrer & Taylor, 2007 Interleaving
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Why it works Practicing at identifying when to use what Promotes organization and item-specific processing Comparison of different types of items Retrieval practice Interleaving
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Students Make comparisons between similar items Jump around when doing practice problems Shuffle flashcards Instructors Ask compare/contrast questions Do not categorize homework assignments Ask questions over entire lecture, not just as you go along Interleaving
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Spacing
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Spreading out study activities over time Spacing
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Undergraduates were presented with Spanish- English translations Quizzed w/feedback at different intervals 0 days 1 day 30 days 5 total quizzes Returned 30 days after last quiz for a final test Bahrick, 1979 Spacing
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Why it works Lots of theories; lots of potential mechanisms Ease of retrieval or understanding leads to lazy learning Spacing
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Students DON’T CRAM!!! “Successful” cramming = mix it up Instructors Assignments throughout sections of the course “Comprehensive” exams Spacing
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Science says… What works Elaboration* Interleaving* Spacing Testing What doesn’t Summarizing Highlighting Rereading *Not yet definitive
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Stop highlighting Study throughout the semester During each episode: Mix things up Test yourself Keep flashcards in rotation even when correct If you’re going to cram: Take breaks Get a good night’s sleep! Ideal studying
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Take a class: PSY330: Learning and Memory Email: cfadler@lindenwood.educfadler@lindenwood.edu Look it up: Dunlosky, J., Rawson, K.A., Marsh, E.J., Nathan, M.J, & Willingham, D.T. (2013). Improving students’ learning with effective learning techniques: Promising directions from cognitive and educational psychology. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 14, 4-58. For more information…
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