Megan Sumeracki
Autor(a) de Understanding How We Learn: A Visual Guide
Obras de Megan Sumeracki
Ace That Test: A Student’s Guide to Learning Better 1 exemplar(es)
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Conhecimento Comum
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Estatísticas
- Obras
- 3
- Membros
- 64
- Popularidade
- #264,968
- Avaliação
- 4.7
- Resenhas
- 3
- ISBNs
- 6
Based on that review, the book then goes into specific strategies for effective learning. If you are familiar with other books such as Making It Stick or Small Teaching, nothing presented in this book is entirely new but there are still details and examples worthy of interest.
So, what are the strategies for effective learning?
1. Planning
1.1. Spaced practice: spreading study activities over time as opposed to cramming (which is bad)
1.2. interleaving: switching between topics while studying as opposed to mass practice.
2. Development of understanding
2.1. Elaboration: asking how and why questions about the topic under review
2.2. Concrete examples, especially to illustrate abstract concepts
2.3. Dual coding, combining visual and textual or spoken elements, while avoiding cognitive overload
3. Reinforcement
3.1 Retrieval practice that brings learned information to mind from long-term memory.
There is obviously no single good ways to implement those strategies. What we do depends on our respective fields, the level of the class (1000-level v. 2000-level), and the amount of time we have. These strategies can be implemented in class or set up so the students can use them on their own time.
While the set of chapters on strategies deals with the research and its results, the last section of the book includes three chapters: tips for teachers, tips for students, and tips for parents (the book is not specifically about higher education but is entirely relevant to it). If, after reading about the strategies, you are not sure where to start, the tips might be useful.
So, again, if you are kinda new to this, this is a good introduction, and the visual aspect (props to the authors for taking their own advice and using dual coding) makes the reading less dry. However, I don’t know who picked the color palette, but holy lack of contrast, that was a bad choice. Some of the font is super small and very light blue, and if you are like me and your eyesight ain’t what it used to be, there will be a few unhappy reading moments.… (mais)