The adaptations shown previously all provide both auditory and visual information in an integrated way.
The harder the better.
The information that a student finds too easy to understand can fail to be sent to long-term memory because it is glossed over by the brain. What we think hard about is what we remember.
We therefore need to be careful about how we repeat what we teach so we don’t encourage shallow learning.
For example, for GCSE revision classes, rather than asking students to reread texts, have them work hard at focusing their attention on the essential meanings of the text. Rereading feels familiar and easy, and won’t prove memorable – after all, they have read it already.
Rather than teaching in topics or blocks, which feels fluent and natural – but is too easy and too fluent – interleave content. Incorporating gaps into the study of a topic, studying different elements of it at different times and revisiting it in the middle of learning something completely different, forces the brain to do a harder job remembering.
This difficulty is what actually makes the knowledge stick.
It’s slower to learn this way, for sure, but it lasts longer. Students may not make what Ofsted calls “rapid progress”, but they will remember what they’re studying better by undertaking more difficult and slower, deeper learning.
An understanding of memory is not an isolated part of education but something that should underpin all learning, informing what we do and why we do it.’
https://www.ldatschool.ca/introduction-working-memory/
Spaced Learning
Cramming facts into learning doesn’t work and neither does associative learning. We need to space practice over time so that learning is repeated just as the association is fading from memory. For example, teach the same concept at intervals of 5 seconds then 25 seconds, 2 minutes, 10 minutes, 1 hour, 1 day, 5 days, 25 days, 4 months etc. This is known as spaced learning and based on the neuroscience of how humans form long-term memory. Permanent neural connections are more likely to be made when a brain cell is stimulated at intervals rather than when it is constantly stimulated.
Lessons are more effective with the following pattern:
• 20 minutes of learning
• physical activity
• applying learning
Marion Stanton – PGCE, AAC accredited (Level 7), MA (online and distance education),
Adv. Dip. Ed. (Special), MCCT
Head of Education