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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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How To Teach Your Brain Something It Won’t Forget A Week Later

How To Teach Your Brain Something It Won’t Forget A Week Later | Help and Support everybody around the world | Scoop.it

Of all the things you learned in school, chances are the right way to learn wasn’t one of them.

 

To make it through academic life, most of us opt for what psychologists call “massed practice,” better known as cramming: It’s Monday and your test is Friday, so you save studying for the night before. One four-hour session can nab you a passing grade, so why not?

 

Well, because that’s not how your brain likes to absorb information. You might remember enough to pass your exam the next day, but just a week or two later and the details will already be fuzzy, if not gone completely. Here’s how to do better.


Via The Learning Factor
Jerry Busone's curator insight, January 12, 2018 8:22 AM

Now I understand my preparation process for any event or task i take on..."The “spacing effect” is one of the most consistently replicated mental processes in psychological history, dating back to Hermann Ebbinghaus, who observed it in 1885.

Kavya Mathur's comment, January 13, 2018 3:52 AM
Good news
CCM Consultancy's curator insight, January 21, 2018 12:52 AM

A four-hour marathon study session (or team meeting or conference presentation) demands a ton of sustained attention, the quality of which will inevitably dwindle the longer those periods last. It simply makes more sense, cognitively speaking, for teams to opt for small doses of high-quality learning–sessions lasting under an hour, with lots of discussion and participation–to make insights stick without taking up much time.

Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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How Your Personality Determines How You Learn

How Your Personality Determines How You Learn | Help and Support everybody around the world | Scoop.it

It's virtually impossible to imagine life without learning. We come into the world armed with little more than a bunch of primitive survival instincts, but it’s thanks to our ability to learn that we start adapting to the environment, going from helpless infants into semi-autonomous children before maturing into young adults. Still, when it comes to how we learn, most of us differ considerably at every stage in that process. Now scientists are learning more about that variation and what's behind it.

 

Psychologists have studied learning for over a century, but research in this area has really taken off in the last two decades. Most studies indicate that our personalities largely determine the ways we like to learn. In other words, who we are shapes how we learn. Here's what some of the latest research has uncovered about the most common learning styles and the ways we can learn to our fullest potential.

 


Via The Learning Factor
Ricard Lloria's insight:

Here's what the latest psychological research says about learning styles and the things that shape them.

michel verstrepen's curator insight, August 6, 2015 11:52 AM

Here's what the latest psychological research says about learning styles and the things that shape them.

Dean J. Fusto's curator insight, August 6, 2015 12:59 PM

Here's what the latest psychological research says about learning styles and the things that shape them.

vgpascal's curator insight, August 7, 2015 8:18 AM

Here's what the latest psychological research says about learning styles and the things that shape them.