01 December, 2008

Get to know "Cramming"

If the ubiquity of immersion-style language programs, emergency test prep classes, bleary-eyed college kids and caffeine-fueled energy potions is any indication, cramming is a wildly popular study strategy. Professors frown upon it yet collude by squashing vast topics like "Evolution" or "World history 1914 to present" into the last week of a course. So is cramming effective or not? A new study by UC–San Diego psychologists confirms what you may suspect deep down: The answer is no. Hurried memorization is a hopeless approach for retaining information. But it's not all bad news. The team offers a precise formula for better study habits, and it doesn't necessarily entail dogged discipline and routine.

To arrive at their prescription, the scientists tested the "spacing effect" on long-term memory. In other words, they wanted to know how the time gap between study sessions influences the ability to remember material on test day. They asked 1,354 volunteers to memorize 32 trivial facts, such as "Who invented snow golf?" (Rudyard Kipling) and "What European nation consumes the most spicy Mexican food?" (Norway). Participants reviewed the answers anywhere from several minutes to several months after first learning them, and then were tested up to a year later.

The findings? Students perform better when they space their study sessions rather than when they try to cram everything into their noggins during one sitting. But for those who must cram, timing is everything. According to the researchers, if you have only one date on which to study, choose a day that's closer to when you first learned the material than when you take the test—but not too close. For instance, if you have a French lesson on Monday and a quiz the following Monday, you should study on Wednesday for maximum retention. Tuesday is too early and Sunday is too late. (Procrastinators, find a different study.) "We find that the optimal time between two study sessions is roughly 10 percent of the time between the second study session and the final test," explains Hal Pashler, one of the lead authors. If you want to remember something for a year, wait about a month to review what you learned.

Pashler suspects that most crammers don't realize the error of their ways. "Even in the scientific community, cram-type summer courses on new research methods are extremely popular," he told me in an email. "And I have never heard people who take these courses even notice the fact that they are a perfect prescription for rapid forgetting."

I challenge you: Name one fact you still remember from the last test for which you crammed. Anyone?.......... Any fact?

2 comments:

Aldhis said...

Hahaha... I give up.. It's true that cramming too close to the exam date would benefit only 60-70% of whole subject and remembered only for the day we took exam. I think students in Indonesia really familiar with this fact even they didn't realize it.
Thank you for sharing Arie. Now I know when is the best time to study for an exam. :p

Alexis said...

I remember those times that I used to cram when there were upcoming exams. This study is right - after a while I forgot what I had studied and memorized.

Anyway, this is off-topic... but I remember those useful stuff wherein the professor used a funny situation or a situation that could be related to something that happens in real life. Btw, the subjects varied from soft sciences to technical subjects. But I remember those theories until now coz somehow I recall that it was one of those times that I laughed at school.

I dunno with some people but maybe injecting humor with teaching as well as relating it to real life daily events could help the student better absorb what is being taught.

So many fond memories of school even though it was mostly dull but some of those happy times during class still manage to cling to the memory even though the rest are just faint and somewhat mostly forgotten ideas and concepts.

Arie, thanks for sharing this good topic, keep up a good post

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