10
Nov
Memorising something from a GPA 4.0
Chamber wrote a little about how he studies in school. Essentially, he calls it a game plan that allows him to absorb the material so that he can squeeze things out like a sponge when exams come by.
Now, just what game plan might pkchukiss be using to get that result in the first semester?
It is actually something deceptively easy - in fact, you might even think that it is no secret. But the fact remains that my game plan is my ticket to winning the first semester.
Study.
Now before you fall to the ground with your legs crooked up in the air, let me qualify that word by saying that “Study” doesn’t mean that you take the material and stare at it for hours on end. (I used to do that though, but since it is super ineffective, I thought that I might as well try something new.)
Studying smart is not something new. The techniques have mostly been discovered and employed by test-smart people all over the world for many generations. It’s just that you might not know the best way to get around to it that may be responsible for an average result in the examinations.
#1: Know what you don’t know
The basics of learning is to make a list of what you need to know, but do not yet know. This allows you to massage your weak areas, instead of spending time cooking the over-done parts, which you already do know. Usually, you can make this list immediately after class, though sometimes it could take a quiz or a mid-semester test to give you the rude awakening. The point is to get help for your weak areas immediately! I dare say that you need to treat it like an emergency situation, if not for your end of semester test, at least so that you won’t become lost when the lecturer goes on to material that builds on what you are already having trouble with!
#2: Stuff it in your head
Once you understand the material on hand, you only need to commit it into your long-term storage memory (a.k.a. non-volatile memory) for reproduction during the examination. Now, just how do you remember all those facts and figures for the end of semester test that seems so far away from now? The trick is to treat your brain like a RAM - where electric charge is applied frequently so that the information is not lost. Similarly, read up on the material you are supposed to remember on a consistent basis, so that the image will be burnt into your brain, like how a plasma television can get ghosty images permanently burnt-in if an image is left stagnant there for a long time.
The timeline goes like this: read the material (don’t even make a conscious effort to remember it) once after the lesson, and again for another time when you go home. Read it again at the end of the week, and another time while you are doing your tutorials. Once more on the month anniversary of that lesson. This should be enough for your brain to absorb the material for the long run. All it takes now is for you to read through the material the night before the test, and you’re good to go for the examinations. Note that if you do not understand the information at all, you need to take a look at #1 above. You must understand the content before this will work.
If the test is more than 6 months away, be sure to take out the content and go through it at least once at the 6 month mark.
You’ll notice that the time between revisions gets longer over time - that is because your mind is being trained to retain that piece of information for longer periods of time. Usually, if you ever get past the one year anniversary, that particular chapter would remain with you for almost the rest of your school life.
#3: Hard facts
You see, there are always these little things that your teacher forces you to memorise. Things like the date when Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles landed on Singapore, the name of the nuclear bomb that ended World War II, 250 word-meaning combinations for the school spelling quiz, part model numbers and other bits and pieces lying around.
Those things can get really annoying - I can attest to that. Worse still, your teacher refuses to tell you the significance behind that nugget of information, or you get kidnapped by aliens, and you need to be able to describe to the police the details of the place you were kept in (aliens seem to like dumping humans after taking them hostages).
For these hard facts and more, use mnemonics.
How do you remember the 9 planets that revolve around the Sun?
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
If you had only one minute to memorise this, and be tested on it 3 hours later, what are the chances that you would remember it from pure memory? Remember #2 shows that you can eventually memorise anything you understand - if you see the material at suitable intervals. The answer would be this:
My
Very
Energetic
Mother
Just
Served
Us
Naughty
Pudding
A mnemonic that is memorable, and preferably outrageous (how can puddings be naughty?) will provide you the shocking effect needed to make an impact on memorising hard facts. Let’s try another one:
Group 8 of the periodic table consists of elements that are stable, and generally unreactive:
Helium
Neon
Argon
Krypton
Xenon
Radon
Try this for a fit:
Horny
Neo
Asks
Keanu Reeves
Xena’s (The warrior princess)
Rack size
It even works for numbers too:
Date of modern Singapore’s founding, 6 February 1819
6 Fabulous (Feb) pigs ate 18 cabbages, and 19 carrots. Raffles saw them, and puked violently on the Temenggong right before he found Singapore.
There. Memorising something isn’t that hard now, is it?
on November 11th, 2007 at 1:49 pm
Heh! I love using mnemonics. When I was in primary school, I remembered the 7 colours of rainbows as: ROY Goes Blue In Violet
on November 15th, 2007 at 12:07 am
“Studying is like a recursive algorithm, you repeat the process again and again until chui…”