Memory and Comprehension Improvement

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How do you remember places, events, and people?
Advertisements

How to Remember the First Ten Amendments
1 MEMORIZATION TECHNIQUES. 2 Why Memorize? When you know something, it is because you have assimilated a chunk of knowledge If you can retrieve the information.
Mnemonic Devices By: Kimmy Bruett. What Are Mnemonic Devices? According to library.thinkquest.org mnemonic devices are devices that people use to help.
This Old Man This old man, he played one, He played nick-nack on my thumb; With a nick-nack paddy whack, give a dog a bone, This old man came rolling.
Writing Prompt 9/25/12 What tricks do you use to remember things? What tricks do you use to remember things? Come up with a memory “trick” that you think.
Improving memory.  Describe various strategies for improving memory  Understand how such strategies are related to memory research.
The 1 st Amendment Basic Freedoms  Freedom of Speech  Freedom of Religion  Freedom of the Press  Freedom of Assembly  Right to petition the government.
Mnemonics O Every wonder how those "geniuses" memorize all the digits of pi or huge lists of names and dates? Chances are, they don't have superior memories;
Mnemonic Devices Training your brain to absorb and retain information for future access.
Memory. Information processing 8Encoding - Getting information in 8Storage - Retaining information 8Retrieval - Getting information out.
1 Encoding: Getting Information in Module Automatic Processing Enormous amount of information is processed effortlessly by us, like: 1.Space: encode.
MEMORY MATTERS!. How would you memorize the following? 25 new Spanish vocabulary words? 10 math formulas? names and locations of major cities on a map.
Improving Memory Unit 8 Lesson 3.
TRAIN your BRAIN to RETAIN
The Bill of Rights The Bill of Rights are the first ten amendments to the U.S Constitution. They insure people’s and states’ rights. These amendments.
Mnemonics By: Group Six Christopher, Kari, Kristie, & Mara.
The first ten amendments to the US Constitution
Memory Improvement. Verbal Mnemonic Techniques 1. Acronyms E.g Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain Good when remembering the order of something. 2. An.
Memory: Unit 7 The information processing model views human (and computer) memory as a system that encodes, stores, and retrieves bits of information.
MNEMONIC DEVICES. What are they? Ways to help you remember important information, names, lists, and a million other things. People have relied on mnemonic.
By: Cody B, Josie S, Ayanna C What effortful processing methods aid in forming memories?
Encoding How we encode: Automatic processing – Is effortless, occurs without our awareness, without interfering with our thinking of other things, and.
THREE PROCESSES OF MEMORY
Chapter 3 SHORT AND LONG TERM MEMORY. Anything in your conscious mind at any one moment Does not necessarily involved paying close attention Repeating.
The First Ten Amendments
Math Strategy Share Mnemonic Strategies:
Intro to Memory Memory is the process by which we recollect prior experiences and information and skills learned in the past Basically have 3 stages,
Memory. Information processing 8Encoding - Getting information in 8Storage - Retaining information 8Retrieval - Getting information out.
Fiorentina Poulli 1LECTURE 4-PSY101. OUTLINE OF THE LESSON  The main stages of memory.  Ways of improving memory.  Forgetting – factors contributing.
Educational Psychology: Theory and Practice Chapter 6
Bill of Rights. The Big Idea The Bill of Rights is the most used part of the Constitution. It affects our daily lives and is very important to understand.
Enhancing Memory. Poor encoding STM Elaborate encoding LTM.
CLICK THE NUMBERS IN SEQUENCE
PSY.Encoding.
The Bill of Rights Amendments = Pen  Amendment 1  Freedom of:  Religion  Speech  Press  Petition  Assembly.
The Ants Go Marching. The ants go marching one by one, hurrah, hurrah.
Mnemonic Strategies From Brain Matters Presented by Ron Runyan.
Freshmen Studies. A Memory Game 1. d-h-r-c-w-j-v.
Memory Strategies How to Learn Spanish Intend to Remember Attitude has much to do with whether you remember something or not Say to yourself, “I am going.
The Bill of Rights 1. Sun: Freedom of speech, press, religion, petition, assembly I love my rights! Petitions Adam Smith G. Washington John Hancock Directions.
Module 4 The natural world Unit 1 Animals. Ask and answer: What are they? They’re _______.
 THERE ARE MORE TO LECTURES THAN JUST SLIDES  This topic covers everything associated with memory such as mnemonics, acronyms, acrostics, narrative.
COGNITIVE AGING. COGNITIVE SKILLS  A number of cognitive skills:  Memory  Attention  Spatial  Visual  Mental Rotation  Executive Functions  Speed.
 Use as many senses as possible to learn We retain:  20% of what we read  30% of what we hear  40% of what we see  50% of what we say  60% of what.
WHAT IS A MNEMONIC DEVICE?? Free Powerpoint Templates.
Memory The persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information Information Processing Model of Memory –Encoding –Storage.
OFFICE OF ACADEMIC SUPPORT
ONE BUN, TWO SHOE THE BILL OF RIGHTS A MNEUMONIC DEVICE FOR MEMORIZING
Remembering Everything
The Bill of Rights Chapter 4.
Bill of Rights.
Exam Fever ? DON’T PANIC.
Memory: Unit 7 The information processing model views human (and computer) memory as a system that encodes, stores, and retrieves bits of information.
Using Brain Science to Improve Memory
Bill of Rights.
Memory Strategies How to Learn Spanish.
Memory Improving Memory.
Dimensions of Learning 2
Mini Poster Project Start 10/24 due 10/26
The first ten amendments to the US Constitution
Auditory.
Chapter 10.2 Memory & Thought: Retrieving Information
CLICK THE NUMBERS IN SEQUENCE
Lecture 2 Memory “Memory Principles: Part I”.
Memory Strategies How to Learn Spanish.
The Bill of Rights.
CLICK THE NUMBERS IN SEQUENCE
Peg Word Demonstration
Presentation transcript:

Memory and Comprehension Improvement Created by: Emily Sorenson

-Use of First-Letter Mnemonics An invented, contrived relationship between items to be learned. When to use it: When meaning-centered approaches to learning are not effective. When there is complex information to be learned that has no internal organization structure. How they work: External associations Visualization Easy to create, store, and retrieve. Rhymes, jingles, phrases, invented words. Most widely used methods: -The Method of Loci -Use of First-Letter Mnemonics -Narrative Chaining -Pegword method -Chunking

The Method of Loci To use this use The Method Of Loci you establish a strong memory of an exact route, pathway, or journey. Associate the items or part of a story with particular objects or locations along the path. The door by which you leave is a proton. The bicycle rack outside the door is a neutron. The fire hydrant a the beginning of the sidewalk is an atom. The group of students you pass is composed of molecules. The gymnasium is full off organelles. The math building is full of organisms. The student union is full of happy families. The building in which your class meets today is a community. The classroom, full of eager students, is a society.

Use of First-Letter Mnemonics The anchor for the memory in Use of First-Letter Mnemonics is the first letter of each item to be recalled. Never eat soggy waffles. Please excuse my dear aunt Sally.

Narrative Chaining Narrative Chaining takes the concepts to be learned and weaves them into some sort of memorable story. This might incorporate the parts of the brain, in order from the front to the back. Example: “John got into his car, turned on the very large motor, and drove to a restaurant. The smells sent him into somatosensory overload, and his auditory reaction startled all those within visual range.”

Pegword Method The Pegword Method is similar to The Method of Loci, this method involves visually relating new terms and concepts to a series of images already stored in long-term memory. This method would work best for vocabulary. This method allows access to any item learned without the necessity of repeating the whole sequence, unlike The Method of Loci. Once is a bun; two is a shoe; Three is a tree; four is a door; Five is a hive; six is sticks; Seven is heaven; eight is a gate Nine is wine; ten is a hen.

Good Old Reliable Chunking *Most useful memory device.* Chunking is not a mnemonic but it organizes information into manageable “chunks” through either internal or external relationships of information sets. Chunks: Sets of interrelated information, organized by meanings or positions, which facilitate learning and memory. We use chunking when information has no intrinsic meaning. Unlike Mnemonics, chunking is a terrific way to remember sets of information that are related by meaning. Chunking reduces the number of items the memory must hold, while at the same time shoes interrelationships of issues and ideas. Example: Alphabet, Phone Numbers, Social Security Numbers, Student ID numbers, License Plate Numbers Amendment 1: This amendment ensures civil liberties – freedom of speech, press, and the right to petition the government. Amendments 2-4: These enumerate issues about armies (militia), the right to bear arms; no more keeping soldiers in your home (quartering); no illegal searches and seizures. Amendments 5-8: These set up rules for the court system. Amendments 9: The people retain their rights. Amendment 10: Powers not specifically given to the federal government go to the states.

Cited Sources Bixby, Mary K. "Chapter 2/ Memory and Comprehension Improvement." Learning in College: I Can Relate. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000. 51-53. Print. VanPatten, Bill, Michael J. Leeser, and Gregory D. Keating. Sol Y Viento: Beginning Spanish. 2nd ed. Vol. 2. Boston: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2008. Print. Cugel2006. "YouTube - Mnemonic Wizards: Incredible Feats of Memory." YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. 10 Sept. 2007. Web. 29 Nov. 2010. <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vsYCSmBcM0>.