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8 Strategies To Remember Things

Discussion in 'Medical Students Cafe' started by Hala, Jan 30, 2014.

  1. Hala

    Hala Golden Member Verified Doctor

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    • Become interested in what you’re learning. We’re all better remembering what interests us. Few people, for example, have a difficult time remembering the names of people they find attractive. If you’re not intrinsically interested in what you’re learning or trying to remember, you must find a way to become so. I have to admit I wasn’t so good at this in medical school. The Krebs cycle (I provided the link only to prove how immensely boring it is) just didn’t excite me or relate to anything I found even remotely exciting (though I made myself learn it anyway).
    • Find a way to leverage your visual memory. You’ll be astounded by how much more this will enable you to remember. For example, imagine you’re at a party and are introduced to five people in quick succession. How can you quickly memorize their names? Pick out a single defining visual characteristic of each person and connect it to a visual representation of their name, preferably through an action of some kind. For example, you can remember Mike who has large ears by creating a mental picture of a microphone (a “mike”) clearing those big ears of wax (gross, I know—sorry—but all the more effective because of it). It requires mental effort to do this, but if you practice you’ll be surprised how quickly you can come up with creative ways to create these images. Here’s another example: how often do you forget where you left your keys, your sunglasses, or your wallet? The next time you put something down somewhere, pause a moment to notice where you’ve placed it, and then in your mind blow it up. If you visualize the explosion in enough detail, you won’t forget where you put it. Remember: memory is predominantly visual (unfortunately, I can’t think of a good image to help you remember this fact right at this moment).
    • Create a mental memory tree. If you’re trying to memorize a large number of facts, find a way to relate them in your mind visually with a memory tree. Construct big branches first, then leaves. Branches and leaves should carry labels that are personally meaningful to you in some way, and the organization of the facts (“leaves”) should be logical. It’s been well recognized since the 1950′s we remember “bits” of information better if we chunk them. For example, it’s easier to remember 467890 as “467″ and “890″ than as six individual digits.
    • Associate what you’re trying to learn with what you already know. It seems the more mental connections we have to a piece of information, the more successful we’ll be in remembering it. This is why using mnemonics actually improves recall.
    • Write out items to be memorized over and over and over. Among other things, this is how I learned the names of bacteria, what infections they cause, and what antibiotics treat them. Writing out facts in lists improves recall if you make yourself learn the lists actively instead of passively. In other words, don’t just copy the list of facts you’re trying to learn but actively recall each item you wish to learn and then write it down again and again and again. In doing this, you are, in effect, teaching yourself what you’re trying to learn (and as all teachers know, the best way to ensure you know something is to have to teach it). This method has the added benefit of immediately showing you exactly which facts haven’t made it into your long-term memory so you can focus more attention on learning them rather than wasting time reinforcing facts you already know.
    • When reading for retention, summarize each paragraph in the margin. This requires you to think about what you’re reading, recycle it, and teach it to yourself again. Even take the concepts you’re learning and reason forward with them; apply them to imagined novel situations, which creates more neural connections to reinforce the memory.
    • Do most of your studying in the afternoon. Though you may identify yourself as a “morning person” or “evening person” at least one study suggests your ability to memorize isn’t influenced as much by what time of day you perceive yourself to be most alert but by the time of day you actually study—afternoon appearing to be the best.
    • Get adequate sleep to consolidate and retain memories. Not just at night after you’ve studied but the day before you study as well. Far better to do this than stay up cramming all night for an exam.

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  2. Ray

    Ray Bronze Member

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    This term seems to be one massive exercise in memorization after the next. From anatomy to histology. There are some simple tricks:
    1) memorize how many things you have to memorize. There are 30 bones in the arm. OK, now you know how many lines you have to fill out.
    2) break it down in groups of no more than 5 or 6 items. 30 bones, 5 groups of 6 or 6 groups of 5. Basically what you can count on one hand.
    Because you have a pencil in the other. 3) give each group a name. Some will make sense, some nope, be silly. 4) memorize each group individually.
    there are only 5 things to remember how hard can it be. 5) long term memorization requires repetition. You have to repeat this stuff over and over again.
    6) each it to others. Either real others, like your class mates, or your cat or the fern. And don't be all "gunner" about it. If your class mates are coming to you
    for help, you are already doing better. And hey, you just might get one of those things called a friend.
     

    namariq and Abdulla Ajaj like this.
  3. udochi onyeike

    udochi onyeike Active member

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    This is very helpful. Also reading in d early hours of the morning also helps because your brain is refreshed from d sleep. Jotting continuously of what you read also helps
     

  4. Benson Minja.

    Benson Minja. Famous Member

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    Thays cool! even to create short words thats presents a certain meaning....example..
    SMART...
    S- Specific
    M- Measurable
    A- acceptable.
    R- Realistics
    T- Time bound.
    Its realy helpfull"!
     

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