learning how to learn better: study strategies & techniques
TRANSCRIPT
Learning How To Learning How To Learn Better:Learn Better:
Study Strategies Study Strategies & Techniques& Techniques
How Do I Prepare Better?
• Step 1: Know how you best learn.
• Step 2: Evaluate what you’re doing.
• Step 3: “Play” to your strengths.
• Step 4: Develop a plan of action.
• Step 5: Carry out that plan.
• Step 6: Decide what worked (or didn’t).
• Step 7: Adjust and begin at step 2 again.
How Do I Study?
There are many different effective ways to study. You
need to build a pool of strategies that work for you that you can use in various
learning situations.
What is “learning” anyway?
It involves:• Getting information into your brain • Thinking about your experiences• Remembering• Expressing your thoughts and feelings• Making sense of the world around • Adapting to new situations
What is “learning” anyway?
When learning takes place you:• Increase your understanding of material• See patterns and connections• Acquire skills• Develop your ability to think critically • Extend your knowledge beyond former limits• Create new products (tangible and intangible)
How Do I Study?
Let’s start a list of strategies
that you can draw from
that is based
on the learning styles
we discussed earlier.
Learning StylesVisualSocial
PhysicalAural Verbal
Solitary Logical
Strategies & Techniques forVISUAL LEARNERS
• Use pictures, graphs, charts, diagrams
• Use mind maps to plan essays and summarize notes or texts
• Use symbols, underlining, to emphasize key concepts
• Use color to distinguish things from each other
• Skim materials before lectures
• During lectures make “mental pictures” of what is said
• Pay close attention to all visual aids used
• Practice a system of note-taking
• Ask for and use any available visual resources
• Enhance memory by “translating” images into words
Strategies & Techniques forVISUAL LEARNERS
• Study paraphrased notes – not the textbook
• Watch a movie in Spanish with the subtitles on
• “Illustrate” your notes with images and graphs
• Draw “comic strips”
Strategies & Techniques forSOCIAL LEARNERS
• Contribute your ideas to group discussion
• Respond to what other say
• Help each other clarify, expand, understand
• Be responsible and prepared when you have committed to being part of a study group
• Set up goals; who will do what and by when?
• Engage in active listening (listening so that you can rephrase what has been said, even if you do not agree with it)
• Stay focused on the subject at hand
Strategies & Techniques forPHYSICAL LEARNERS
• Use your finger to point at things as you read
• Stop and physically write out notes as you go along (summarizing small sections)
• Draw diagrams or charts• Take breaks and get up
and move • Use your body (gestures,
movements) as you study
• Get up and walk around the room as you study (carry notes, books, etc.)
• Hold something in your hand that you can manipulate while you study (stress ball, etc.)
• Tap to a rhythm as you study
• Eat, drink, chew gum while studying
Strategies & Techniques forPHYSICAL LEARNERS
• Type or rewrite your notes
• “Write” words with your body
• “Illustrate” your notes with images and graphs
• Draw “comic strips”• Use a yo-yo or toss a ball
while you study
Strategies & Techniques forAURAL LEARNERS
• Listen to movies, songs, TV shows about the topic
• Have a debate with someone
• Make an audio tape of your notes and listen to it
• Create jingles or chants to help with memorization – the crazier the better
• State “problems” and “solutions” out loud
• Say words in syllables• Make up rhymes to
remember dates, etc.• Study with a partner and
discuss topics• To learn a sequence,
write it out first and then say it out loud
• Use mnemonic devices
Strategies & Techniques forVERBAL LEARNERS
• Read notes aloud• Hear yourself talk• Verbally interpret charts,
graphs, images • Talk to yourself as you
read; ask questions to guide your focus and then answer them
• Summarize sections of chapters in your own words
• Generate a list of “study questions” as you go
• Create songs, rhymes, jingles as memory aids
• Read and discuss topics with classmates
Strategies & Techniques forLOGICAL LEARNERS
• Look for organizational patterns of chapters, processes, topics
• Develop an outline by using context clues (titles, etc) and fill in details as you read
• Make notes of key points at the end of each section of a chapter
• Know the specifics about what you should be able to do
Exploring Strategies
• How would each type of learner react in these situations?– Learning to ride a bike– Learning a new software program– Learning to play a new game– Learning algebra
Exploring Your Strategies1. Think about the last time you learned something really well. How
did you study? What, specifically, did you do?
2. Think about the last time you did not learn something well
enough. How did you study then?
3. What “style” did each of those sets of learning strategies primarily
belong to?
4. Based on your learning style profile (graph), explain what impact
your chosen strategies might have had on your learning.
5. Think of a class that you’ve struggled in. Decide which type of
strategies you used in this class. Look at your learning style
graph. Do these strategies fall within your areas of strength?
6. Think of the last time you had difficulty learning something. List
the kinds of things you did. Now think about your style profile.
What might you now do differently?