基于大脑研究的增强记忆策略。

Alison K. Banikowski, Teresa A. Mehring
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引用次数: 65

摘要

记忆是人类的一种奇妙特征。现在,科学家们比历史上任何时候都更能解开增强记忆力的秘密。记忆对教育工作者来说极其重要,不仅对他们个人来说,因为他们年龄大了,担心记忆力下降,而且最重要的是,记忆在教学过程中发挥的作用。记忆,作为一个概念,经常被贬为一个最小的角色。正如Caine和Caine(1997)所指出的,“我们中的许多人将单词记忆与特定日期或事实或信息列表和指令集的回忆联系在一起,需要记忆和努力”(第41页)。然而,记忆超越了学习的一维方面,而是专注于关注、学习、联系、记忆和使用我们不断遇到的一千条知识和技能。对于教育工作者来说,记忆是证明已经学到了什么或任何东西的唯一证据。想想看。如果学生不能将知识或技能记忆起来,即使是短暂的记忆,我们怎么知道他们已经学会了知识或技能?它让人联想到漫画中两个男孩在说话的情景。一个男孩把他的狗放在身边,说:“我已经教我的狗怎么吹口哨了。”另一个小男孩说:“太好了!让我听他吹口哨。”这促使第一个男孩说,“我说我教他怎么吹口哨。我没说他学会了!”对于教育工作者来说,这有什么意义?如果教而不学,我们不妨跳过教学!教育工作者必须确保学生关注学习,将新的学习与以前的学习相结合,积极参与学习,构建意义,并展示他们的学习。所有这些都需要内存。没有一个真正的教育家只想“教书”;教育工作者希望学生“学习”。教育工作者希望学习者能够组织、存储和检索知识和技能。通过应用我们所知道的?关于大脑如何学习和记忆,教育工作者可以关注“教学/学习过程”的“学习”方面。为了帮助教育工作者,本文将关注与记忆相关的三个方面:
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Strategies To Enhance Memory Based on Brain-Research.
Memory is a wonderful trait of human beings. Now, more than ever in history, scientists are unlocking the secrets to enhancing memory. Memory is extremely important to educators, not only for them personally as they age and worry about failing memory, but, most important, for the role that memory plays in the teaching/learning process. Memory, as a concept, often is relegated to a minimal role. As noted by Caine and Caine ( 1997), "Many of us associate the word memory with the recall of specific dates or facts or lists of information and sets of instructions, requiring memorization and effort" (p. 41). Memory, however, goes beyond this one-dimensional aspect of learning and, rather, focuses on attending, learning, linking, remembering, and using the thousand pieces of knowledge and skills we encounter constantly. For educators, memory is the only evidence that something or anything has been learned. Think about it. If students cannot commit knowledge or skills to memory, even briefly, how can we know they have learned the knowledge or skill? It conjures up visions of the cartoon where two boys are talking. The one boy, with his dog at his side, says, "I've taught my dog how to whistle," and the other little boy says, "Great! Let me hear him whistle." This prompts the first boy to say, "I said I taught him how to whistle. I didn't say he learned it!" For educators, what's the point? If teaching occurs without learning, we might as well skip the teaching in the first place! Educators must ensure that students attend to learning, attach new learning to previous learning, actively engage in learning, construct meaning, and demonstrate their learning. All of this requires memory. No true educator simply wants to "teach"; educators want students to "learn." Educators want learners to be able to organize, store, and retrieve knowledge and skills. By applying what we kn?w about how the brain learns and remembers, educators can focus on the "learning" aspect of the "teaching/learning process." To assist educators, this article will focus on three aspects related to memory:
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