Encoding & Retrieval (from notes) Flashcards

1
Q

Peg method

A

memorize a series of pegs (e.g. “One is a Bun”)

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2
Q

Method of Loci

A

remember various “drops” in a familiar place (e.g. Chaucer sitting on the sofa)

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3
Q

Link method

A

when remembering lists form an image for each item and picture them interacting

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4
Q

Stories

A

develop a story containing all of the to be remembered information

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5
Q

First letter method

A

Create a word from the first letters of words (e.g. HOMES for the great lakes)

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6
Q

Keyword

A

taking part of the keyword and pairing it with an image (e.g. a gust of wind blowing through a horse’s mane to remember August)

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7
Q

What do we know about metacognition?

A

They oversee the memory system, is rather late developing, can be improved through direct instruction & modeling, and is largely independent of general ability

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8
Q

What are the two main categories of metacognition?

A

Knowledge of cognition & Regulation of cognition

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9
Q

What are the three types of knowledge of cognition in metacognition?

A

Declarative (knowledge of memory limitations), procedural (knowledge about strategies), conditional (knowledge about when and why to use strategies)

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10
Q

What are the three types of knowledge of cognition in regulation of cognition?

A

Planning (setting goals, activating background knowledge, budgeting time), Monitoring (observation of performance), Evaluation (reevaluating goals, revising predicitons)

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11
Q

What are some examples of cognitive strategies?

A

Self-checking, creating a productive physical environment, goal setting and planning, summarizing during learning, predicting, monitoring, etc.

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12
Q

What is characteristic of a good strategy user?

A

They have a broad repertoire of strategies, have metacognitive knowledge about why, when, and where to use strategies (conditional knowledge), has a broad knowledge base, ignores distractions, and is automatic about the four components described above

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13
Q

How can you teach metacognitive strategy regulation?

A

Model strategies that cut across domains, encourage students to transfer strategies, explain when and where a strategy will be used, etc.

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14
Q

Summary recommendations from the Information Processing Model:

A
  • Overlearn to the point of automaticity
  • Encourage deeper processing
  • Help guide selective attention
  • Remember that meaning drives learning and memory
  • Develop not only knowledge but monitoring ability
  • Strategies rule!
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15
Q

3 Levels of cognitive study strategies:

A
  1. Basic study strategies (highlighting, underlining, note taking - don’t assume students know these)
  2. Comprehension Monitoring strategies (self-questioning, summarizing, these are things you do “on-line” while learning)
  3. Critical thinking (the most important level - this is your goal!)
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16
Q

What skills are essential in critical thinking?

A
  • Distinguish between verifiable facts and vague claims
  • Distinguish between relevant and irrelevant information, claims, or reasons
  • Determining the factual accuracy of a statement
  • Determining the credibility of a source
  • Identifying ambiguous claims or arguments
  • Identifying unstated assumptions
  • Detecting bias
  • Recognizing logical inconsistencies in a line of reasoning
  • Determining the strength of an argument or claim