How to remember what you learned?
Tell me and I forget, teach me and I may remember, involve me and I learn. — Benjamin Franklin
Memory is very important in learning. The mind is built to retain general information about a place.
Our brain has multiple Memory Systems:
- Naturally super-sized and outstanding
- Hippocampus
- Brain System
- Store new information in the cortex
- Memory of events and perceptions
- Responsible for the memory consolidation process
- Neural Hooks
- Built by evoking the senses
- Smells/sounds
- Makes it easier to recall the concept and what it means
- Built by evoking the senses
- Visual and Spacial Memory
- Images
- Connect directly to your right brain’s visual spacial centers
- Helps you to encapsulate concepts
- The funnier and evocative – the better
- Beginning to Tap
- Try to make a very memorable visual image
- Representing key item you want to remember
- Images
- Working Memory
- Temporary
- You need to focus your attention to bring things to working memory
In the end we retain from our studies only that which we practically apply. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
In order to convert the concepts into Long-Term Memory:
- Concepts
- Draw
- Should be memorable
- Repetition
- Solidify and strengthen neural patterns
- Sporadically over several days
- Increase your spacing – Gradually
- A few minutes in the morning
- Gradually extend the time between your repetitions
- Index cards
- Enhance retention
- Saying (Audio hooks)
- Handwriting
- Helps to deeply encode
- Converts information into neural memory structures
- Sleep
- Mind repeats patterns
- Pieces together solutions
There is no end to education. It is not that you read a book, pass an examination, and finish with education. The whole of life, from the moment you are born to the moment you die, is a process of learning. — Krishnamurti