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Welcome! (Home Page)
The Intellectual Problems of a College Freshman
Note Taking
Brain Action During Study
Formation of Study Habits
Guide To Effective Study
Active Imagination
First Aids to Memory: Impression
Second Aids to Memory: Retention, Recall and Recognition
Concentration of Attention
How We Reason
Expression as an aid in Study
How to become Interested in a Subject
The Plateau of Despond
Mental Second Wind
Examinations
Guide to Successful Exams
Bodily Conditions for Effective Study
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College Tips - Second Aids to Memory: Retention, Recall and Recognition
Our discussion
up to this point has centered around the phase of memory called impression. We
have described some of the conditions favorable to impression and have seen that
certain and accurate memory depends upon adherence to them. The next phase of
memory—Retention—cannot be described in psychological terms. We know we retain
facts after they are once impressed, but as to their status in the mind we can
say nothing. If you were asked when the Declaration of Independence was signed,
you would reply instantly. When asked, however, where that fact was five minutes
ago, you could not answer. Somewhere in the recesses of the mind, perhaps, but
as to immediate awareness of it, there was none. We may try to think of
retention in terms of nerve cells and say that at the time when the material was
first impressed there was some modification made in certain nerve cells which
persisted. This trait of nerve modifiability is one factor which accounts for
greater retentive power in some persons than in others. It must not be
concluded, however, that all good memory is due to the inheritance of this
trait. It is due partly to observance of proper conditions of impression, and
much can be done to overcome or offset innate difficulty of modification by such
observance.
We are now
ready to examine the third phase of memory—Recall. This is the stage at which
material that has been impressed and retained is recalled to serve the purpose
for which it was memorized. Recall is thus the goal of memory, and all the
devices so far discussed have it for their object. Can we facilitate recall by
any other means than by faithful and intelligent impressions? For answer let us
examine the state of mind at time of recall.
We find that
it is a unique mental state. It differs from impression in being a period of
more active search for facts in the mind accompanied by expression, instead of a
concentration upon the external impression. It is also usually accompanied by
motor expressions, either talking or writing. Since recall is a unique mental
state, you ought to prepare for it by means of a rehearsal. When you are
memorizing anything to be recalled, make part of your memorizing a rehearsal of
it, if possible, under same conditions as final recall. In memorizing from a
book, first make impression, then close the book and practise recall. When
memorizing a selection to be given in a public speaking class, intersperse the
periods of impression with periods of recall. This is especially necessary in
preparation for public speaking, for facing an audience gives rise to a vastly
different psychic attitude from that of impression. The sight of an audience may
be embarrassing or exciting. Furthermore, unforeseen distractions may arise.
Accordingly, create those conditions as nearly as possible in your preparation.
Imagine yourself facing the audience. Practise aloud so that you will become
accustomed to the sound of your own voice. The importance of the practice of
recall as a part of the memory process can hardly be overestimated. One
psychologist has advised that in memorizing significant material more than half
the time should be spent in practising recall.
There still
remains a fourth phase of memory—Recognition. Whenever a remembered fact is
recalled, it is accompanied by a characteristic feeling which we call the
feeling of recognition. It has been described as a feeling of familiarity, a
glow of warmth, a sense of ownership, a feeling of intimacy. As you walk down
the street of a great city you pass hundreds of faces, all of them strange.
Suddenly in the crowd you catch sight of some one you know and are instantly
suffused with a glow of feeling that is markedly different from your feeling
toward the others. That glow represents the feeling of recognition. It is always
present during recall and may be used in great advantage in studying. It derives
its virtue for our purpose from the fact that it is a feeling, and at the time
of feeling the bodily activities in general are affected. Changes occur in heart
beat, breathing; various glandular secretions are affected, the digestive organs
respond. In this general quickening of bodily activity we have reason to believe
that the nervous system partakes, and things become impressed more readily. Thus
the feeling of recognition that accompanies recall is responsible for one of the
benefits of reviews. At such a time material once memorized becomes tinged with
a feelingful color different from that which accompanied it when new. Review,
then, not merely to produce additional impressions, but also to take advantage
of the feeling of recognition.
We have now
discussed memory in its four phases and have seen clearly that it operates not
in a blind, chaotic manner, but according to law. Certain conditions are
required and when they are met memory is good. After providing proper conditions
for memory, then, trust your memory. An attitude of confidence is very
necessary. If, when you are memorizing, you continually tremble for fear that
you will not recall at the desired moment, the fixedness of the impression will
be greatly hindered. Therefore, after utilizing all your knowledge about the
conditions of memorizing, rest content and trust to the laws of Nature. They
will not fail you.
By this time
you have seen that memory is not a mysterious mental faculty with which some
people are generously endowed, and of which others are deprived. All people of
normal intelligence can remember and can improve their ability if they desire.
The improvement does not take the form that some people expect, however. No
magic wand can transform you into a good memorizes You must work the
transformation yourself. Furthermore, it is not an instantaneous process to be
accomplished overnight. It will come about only after you have built up a set of
habits, according to our conception of study as a process of habit formation.
A final word
of caution should be added. Some people think of memory as a separate division
or compartment of the mind which can be controlled and improved by exercising it
alone. Such a conception is fallacious. Improvement in memory will involve
improvement in other mental abilities, and you will find that as you improve
your ability to remember, you will develop at the same time better powers to
concentrate attention, to image, to associate facts and to reason.
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