SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 16
Learning How To
Learn
“The only person who is educated is the one
who has learned how to learn and change.”
Carl Rogers
2ADD A FOOTER
• “Definitions of learning and learning processes are indisputably
historically and culturally variable” (Chisholm and Demetriou
2006;1)
• Two very wide definitions may serve as a starting point to
explore learning
• The acquisition of knowledge or skills through study, experience,
or being taught.
• Livingston defines learning generically as “the gaining of
knowledge or skill anytime, anywhere through individual and
group processes” (2005, p.3).
Learning How to Learn
3ADD A FOOTER
Maslow’s Four Processes of Learning
4ADD A FOOTER
• You have to show the brain what's important.
• You do that through repeated use and testing, taking advantage of what
educational psychologists call "desirable difficulty,“ an empirically
verified principle that shows that people have better recall when they
use mental effort.
• Learning that feels difficult embeds knowledge in your memory better
• It's why flashcards are such an effective study tool: They force you to
dig the idea out of your memory, unlike highlighting (or taking pictures of
professor’s notes) where you're not pressing the knowledge into your
brain.
Challenge Yourself
5ADD A FOOTER
Psychological research has uncovered many secrets to learning. What we’re
about to tell you is the real deal, proven to work in scientific laboratories and
in schools from junior high to the university level (McDaniel et al., 2011;
McDaniel, Roediger & McDermott, 2007; Roediger, Putnam & Smith, 2011).
• The secret to doing well is testing yourself on what you’ve studied —
asking yourself questions, retrieving the answers, going back and re-
studying what you didn’t know, and testing yourself again and again until
you learn the material. And even when you learn it, you need to keep
testing yourself regularly over the semester so that what you’ve learned
stays learned.
The Nine Secrets of Learning
6ADD A FOOTER
• Read a section of the chapter. Then close the book and hide your
notes.
• Recite (speak aloud) everything you can remember about what
you've just read.
• Review the section by reading it again to correct anything you got
wrong, or to revisit important information that you overlooked when
you recited.
Secret #1: Use the 3R technique:
Read. Recite. Review
7ADD A FOOTER
• You can’t read your textbook the same way you check your Facebook page, at a quick,
superficial level.
• Many students assume that the mind is a bin or a sponge; you just pour information into
it, and it stays there.
• For the information to stay there, you have to process it until you get it. When you put in
effort to understand something, you are signaling your brain that the “something” is worth
remembering.
• An excellent way to do this, as you read, is to try to connect the new information to
information you already know.
Secret #2: Dig deep.
8ADD A FOOTER
• Students who visualize ideas remember them better than
students who don’t
• The key part of this technique is to make your images interact.
• e.g. So when you read in eg. chapter 4 that “glia cells” (from the
Greek word for “glue”) are the most common cell in the brain
and that they hold neurons in place, you could visualize
squirting a big bottle of glue labeled “glia” under neurons.
Secret #3: Use your imagination.
9ADD A FOOTER
• You've just read the material in the first section of a chapter, and it’s time for
you to begin the recite phase.
• Start by trying to remember everything you can
• Then look at the outline on the first page of the chapter and use it to jog your
memory and remember even more. Check the terms in the margins, cover up
their definitions and try to define them in your own words.
• Jot down your answers, or speak them into your computer, tablet or phone so
you can play them back later. As you go along, make a note about anything
you can’t remember, but don’t look up the answers yet. When you’re done, go
back and see how well you knew the terms in the margins or answered the
questions in the self-tests.
Secret #4: Test yourself.
10ADD A FOOTER
• A lecture is not like a DVD. For one thing, you can’t hit the pause button. For another
thing, if you’re not giving the lecture your full attention, you will miss something
important and not even realize it.
• It’s crucial that you take good notes in class. There’s a balance to note taking: On
the one hand, you want your notes to be accurate and complete; on the other hand,
you don’t want them to be a transcript, because then really important things are
hard to find.
• While you’re listening to your instructor, think about how what you’re hearing is
connected to what you already know. Write down key words and phrases, not full
sentences and paragraphs the way a court reporter would..
Secret #5: Keep your head up and
your pen down
11ADD A FOOTER
• As soon as you can after class read over your scribbled notes, and neatly summarize
them in a page or two.
• At the end of the semester, when it is time to prepare for the final, your notes should
describe the heart of the course.
• They should reveal the scope and pattern of the professor’s thinking and the way the
lectures aligned with the readings.
• You will take the first step toward mastering the art of getting to the essence of a topic.
You will also learn to love to learn, and, perhaps most important, learn to think critically
and challenge unsubstantiated assertions. This is what it’s like to be a
student.
What to do after class
Secret #6: Process your notes.
12ADD A FOOTER
• You might be tempted to skip the parts of a chapter that you feel sure
you know. Don’t do it. Instead, take advantage of a powerful research
finding:
• Students who retest themselves by recalling information they could
remember earlier do twice as well on an exam as students who skipped
retesting themselves on familiar material (Karpicke & Roediger, 2007).
Studying for exams
Secret #7: Once you learn it, don’t drop it.
13ADD A FOOTER
• The problem with cramming is that it gives you a misplaced sense of confidence that you
know the material.
• You might remember some of it for a while, you won’t remember it for long.
• That’s because you have not taken the time to repeatedly organize the information in
your memory, connect it to what you already know, and pave the new mental roads that
will help you retrieve information later, as on the exam.
• That’s one of the reasons many students “blank out” when they actually take the test.
Secret #8: Forget about cramming!
14ADD A FOOTER
• There is an alternative to those painful all-nighters. Rather than
cramming all your attempts to test yourself into one giant awful
block of time, test yourself regularly throughout the semester,
say once a week (Bjork & Bjork, 2011),
• Be sure to include material you already know in your regular
testing sessions.
• The secrets to doing well on a test tomorrow aren’t different from
the secrets to doing well all semester.
Secret #8: Forget about cramming!
15ADD A FOOTER
• There is no evidence that people learn better when the method
matches their preferences, and no evidence that using methods
that don’t match their preferences are ineffective (Pashler et al.,
2008).
• Visualizing material helps everybody, and so does plain old
active listening
Secret #9: We might have learning
styles but….
16ADD A FOOTER
• No matter how good they are, no course and no
textbook can do your work for you.
But ultimately, a 10th secret of learning is
this

More Related Content

What's hot

MultigenrePresentation
MultigenrePresentationMultigenrePresentation
MultigenrePresentation
wolfseer
 
Learn how to study
Learn how to studyLearn how to study
Learn how to study
Lisa Stack
 
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
Rusmin Galatama
 

What's hot (20)

Learning To Learn by Catalyst NLP
Learning To Learn by Catalyst NLPLearning To Learn by Catalyst NLP
Learning To Learn by Catalyst NLP
 
Study Habits For Children
Study Habits For ChildrenStudy Habits For Children
Study Habits For Children
 
Important Tips to Prepare for Competitive Exam
Important Tips to Prepare for Competitive ExamImportant Tips to Prepare for Competitive Exam
Important Tips to Prepare for Competitive Exam
 
How to study in an efficient way
How to study in an efficient wayHow to study in an efficient way
How to study in an efficient way
 
How to Develop Good Study Habits: For ESL Students
How to Develop Good Study Habits: For ESL StudentsHow to Develop Good Study Habits: For ESL Students
How to Develop Good Study Habits: For ESL Students
 
Study skills
Study skillsStudy skills
Study skills
 
Preparing for an exam slide show new
Preparing for an exam slide show newPreparing for an exam slide show new
Preparing for an exam slide show new
 
Study Skills
Study SkillsStudy Skills
Study Skills
 
MultigenrePresentation
MultigenrePresentationMultigenrePresentation
MultigenrePresentation
 
1 2 6 Developing Good Study Habits
1 2 6 Developing Good Study Habits1 2 6 Developing Good Study Habits
1 2 6 Developing Good Study Habits
 
Study Smart, Study Less – Improving Your Study Skills
Study Smart, Study Less – Improving Your Study SkillsStudy Smart, Study Less – Improving Your Study Skills
Study Smart, Study Less – Improving Your Study Skills
 
Study skills powerpoint
Study skills powerpointStudy skills powerpoint
Study skills powerpoint
 
How To Study Effectively
How To Study EffectivelyHow To Study Effectively
How To Study Effectively
 
Exam Preparation
Exam PreparationExam Preparation
Exam Preparation
 
Learn how to study
Learn how to studyLearn how to study
Learn how to study
 
The Best (and worst) Study Habits.
The Best (and worst) Study Habits.The Best (and worst) Study Habits.
The Best (and worst) Study Habits.
 
Exam and Test Preparation
Exam and Test PreparationExam and Test Preparation
Exam and Test Preparation
 
The best tips to learn
The best tips to learnThe best tips to learn
The best tips to learn
 
Learning how to learn
Learning how to learnLearning how to learn
Learning how to learn
 
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
DATA PERSENTASE DI STIAMI SEMESTER 11
 

Similar to Learning how to learn unv success

Study tips for graduates
Study tips for graduatesStudy tips for graduates
Study tips for graduates
Jane Leonard
 
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptxvdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
Ramorin
 
Test taking strategies
Test taking strategiesTest taking strategies
Test taking strategies
carawc
 

Similar to Learning how to learn unv success (20)

Study Skills
Study SkillsStudy Skills
Study Skills
 
3 steps for effective studying
3 steps for effective studying3 steps for effective studying
3 steps for effective studying
 
Test taking
Test takingTest taking
Test taking
 
Pqrst
PqrstPqrst
Pqrst
 
Study Skills
Study SkillsStudy Skills
Study Skills
 
Study strategies5 24-12
Study strategies5 24-12Study strategies5 24-12
Study strategies5 24-12
 
Study tips for graduates
Study tips for graduatesStudy tips for graduates
Study tips for graduates
 
Motivation tips
Motivation tipsMotivation tips
Motivation tips
 
MOTIVATION TIPS
MOTIVATION TIPSMOTIVATION TIPS
MOTIVATION TIPS
 
Learning how to learn
Learning how to learnLearning how to learn
Learning how to learn
 
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptxvdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
vdocuments.net_studying-how-did-you-learn-how-to-study.pptx
 
Studying tips your guide to studying smart
Studying tips your guide to studying smartStudying tips your guide to studying smart
Studying tips your guide to studying smart
 
Study Skills Playbook Webinar Slides
Study Skills Playbook Webinar SlidesStudy Skills Playbook Webinar Slides
Study Skills Playbook Webinar Slides
 
Presentation1
Presentation1Presentation1
Presentation1
 
STUDY SKILLS SLIDE SHOW
STUDY SKILLS SLIDE SHOWSTUDY SKILLS SLIDE SHOW
STUDY SKILLS SLIDE SHOW
 
Sq3 r
Sq3 rSq3 r
Sq3 r
 
Study habits
Study habitsStudy habits
Study habits
 
10 things that successful student do by indiaresults.com
10 things that successful student do by indiaresults.com10 things that successful student do by indiaresults.com
10 things that successful student do by indiaresults.com
 
Day 3 Reading
Day 3 ReadingDay 3 Reading
Day 3 Reading
 
Test taking strategies
Test taking strategiesTest taking strategies
Test taking strategies
 

Recently uploaded

IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdffIATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
17thcssbs2
 
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyesppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ashishpaul799
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 

Recently uploaded (20)

slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
 
IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdffIATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
IATP How-to Foreign Travel May 2024.pdff
 
Essential Safety precautions during monsoon season
Essential Safety precautions during monsoon seasonEssential Safety precautions during monsoon season
Essential Safety precautions during monsoon season
 
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
 
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyesppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
ppt your views.ppt your views of your college in your eyes
 
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptxThe Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
The Ball Poem- John Berryman_20240518_001617_0000.pptx
 
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in HinduismAn overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
 
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
 
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdfMichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
 
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjStl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
 
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
 
REPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY STUDIE OF MALE AND FEMALEpptx
REPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY  STUDIE OF MALE AND FEMALEpptxREPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY  STUDIE OF MALE AND FEMALEpptx
REPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY STUDIE OF MALE AND FEMALEpptx
 
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
 
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
 Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
Envelope of Discrepancy in Orthodontics: Enhancing Precision in Treatment
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
 
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
 
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdfPost Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
 
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matricesApplication of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
Application of Matrices in real life. Presentation on application of matrices
 
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
 

Learning how to learn unv success

  • 1. Learning How To Learn “The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn and change.” Carl Rogers
  • 2. 2ADD A FOOTER • “Definitions of learning and learning processes are indisputably historically and culturally variable” (Chisholm and Demetriou 2006;1) • Two very wide definitions may serve as a starting point to explore learning • The acquisition of knowledge or skills through study, experience, or being taught. • Livingston defines learning generically as “the gaining of knowledge or skill anytime, anywhere through individual and group processes” (2005, p.3). Learning How to Learn
  • 3. 3ADD A FOOTER Maslow’s Four Processes of Learning
  • 4. 4ADD A FOOTER • You have to show the brain what's important. • You do that through repeated use and testing, taking advantage of what educational psychologists call "desirable difficulty,“ an empirically verified principle that shows that people have better recall when they use mental effort. • Learning that feels difficult embeds knowledge in your memory better • It's why flashcards are such an effective study tool: They force you to dig the idea out of your memory, unlike highlighting (or taking pictures of professor’s notes) where you're not pressing the knowledge into your brain. Challenge Yourself
  • 5. 5ADD A FOOTER Psychological research has uncovered many secrets to learning. What we’re about to tell you is the real deal, proven to work in scientific laboratories and in schools from junior high to the university level (McDaniel et al., 2011; McDaniel, Roediger & McDermott, 2007; Roediger, Putnam & Smith, 2011). • The secret to doing well is testing yourself on what you’ve studied — asking yourself questions, retrieving the answers, going back and re- studying what you didn’t know, and testing yourself again and again until you learn the material. And even when you learn it, you need to keep testing yourself regularly over the semester so that what you’ve learned stays learned. The Nine Secrets of Learning
  • 6. 6ADD A FOOTER • Read a section of the chapter. Then close the book and hide your notes. • Recite (speak aloud) everything you can remember about what you've just read. • Review the section by reading it again to correct anything you got wrong, or to revisit important information that you overlooked when you recited. Secret #1: Use the 3R technique: Read. Recite. Review
  • 7. 7ADD A FOOTER • You can’t read your textbook the same way you check your Facebook page, at a quick, superficial level. • Many students assume that the mind is a bin or a sponge; you just pour information into it, and it stays there. • For the information to stay there, you have to process it until you get it. When you put in effort to understand something, you are signaling your brain that the “something” is worth remembering. • An excellent way to do this, as you read, is to try to connect the new information to information you already know. Secret #2: Dig deep.
  • 8. 8ADD A FOOTER • Students who visualize ideas remember them better than students who don’t • The key part of this technique is to make your images interact. • e.g. So when you read in eg. chapter 4 that “glia cells” (from the Greek word for “glue”) are the most common cell in the brain and that they hold neurons in place, you could visualize squirting a big bottle of glue labeled “glia” under neurons. Secret #3: Use your imagination.
  • 9. 9ADD A FOOTER • You've just read the material in the first section of a chapter, and it’s time for you to begin the recite phase. • Start by trying to remember everything you can • Then look at the outline on the first page of the chapter and use it to jog your memory and remember even more. Check the terms in the margins, cover up their definitions and try to define them in your own words. • Jot down your answers, or speak them into your computer, tablet or phone so you can play them back later. As you go along, make a note about anything you can’t remember, but don’t look up the answers yet. When you’re done, go back and see how well you knew the terms in the margins or answered the questions in the self-tests. Secret #4: Test yourself.
  • 10. 10ADD A FOOTER • A lecture is not like a DVD. For one thing, you can’t hit the pause button. For another thing, if you’re not giving the lecture your full attention, you will miss something important and not even realize it. • It’s crucial that you take good notes in class. There’s a balance to note taking: On the one hand, you want your notes to be accurate and complete; on the other hand, you don’t want them to be a transcript, because then really important things are hard to find. • While you’re listening to your instructor, think about how what you’re hearing is connected to what you already know. Write down key words and phrases, not full sentences and paragraphs the way a court reporter would.. Secret #5: Keep your head up and your pen down
  • 11. 11ADD A FOOTER • As soon as you can after class read over your scribbled notes, and neatly summarize them in a page or two. • At the end of the semester, when it is time to prepare for the final, your notes should describe the heart of the course. • They should reveal the scope and pattern of the professor’s thinking and the way the lectures aligned with the readings. • You will take the first step toward mastering the art of getting to the essence of a topic. You will also learn to love to learn, and, perhaps most important, learn to think critically and challenge unsubstantiated assertions. This is what it’s like to be a student. What to do after class Secret #6: Process your notes.
  • 12. 12ADD A FOOTER • You might be tempted to skip the parts of a chapter that you feel sure you know. Don’t do it. Instead, take advantage of a powerful research finding: • Students who retest themselves by recalling information they could remember earlier do twice as well on an exam as students who skipped retesting themselves on familiar material (Karpicke & Roediger, 2007). Studying for exams Secret #7: Once you learn it, don’t drop it.
  • 13. 13ADD A FOOTER • The problem with cramming is that it gives you a misplaced sense of confidence that you know the material. • You might remember some of it for a while, you won’t remember it for long. • That’s because you have not taken the time to repeatedly organize the information in your memory, connect it to what you already know, and pave the new mental roads that will help you retrieve information later, as on the exam. • That’s one of the reasons many students “blank out” when they actually take the test. Secret #8: Forget about cramming!
  • 14. 14ADD A FOOTER • There is an alternative to those painful all-nighters. Rather than cramming all your attempts to test yourself into one giant awful block of time, test yourself regularly throughout the semester, say once a week (Bjork & Bjork, 2011), • Be sure to include material you already know in your regular testing sessions. • The secrets to doing well on a test tomorrow aren’t different from the secrets to doing well all semester. Secret #8: Forget about cramming!
  • 15. 15ADD A FOOTER • There is no evidence that people learn better when the method matches their preferences, and no evidence that using methods that don’t match their preferences are ineffective (Pashler et al., 2008). • Visualizing material helps everybody, and so does plain old active listening Secret #9: We might have learning styles but….
  • 16. 16ADD A FOOTER • No matter how good they are, no course and no textbook can do your work for you. But ultimately, a 10th secret of learning is this