Wednesday, November 13, 2019
A Method To Memory :: essays research papers
 A Method to Memory           The other night I was sitting at home in my room watching the Rockets  game, and my phone begins to ring. I answer "Hello", and I hear this frantic  voice that I recognize as my friend Mandy's. Mandy is a nervous wreck, she has  a big bio-chem test in the morning and can't seem to remember a thing. I ask  her what kind of information she has, and she tells me she has notes and her  book. Now being the nice guy I am, and having just completed learning about  memory in my Intro to Psych class, I turned off the T.V. and told her I'd help  her learn to memorize things.       The first thing I told her about was a method called rehearsal. I  explained that rehearsal involved repeating the information time after time to  keep it from fading from her short term memory, or STM. She was a bit confused  so I simplified it for her. I reminded her of the other night when she was  looking for the number to Pizza Hut in the phone book, and when she found it she  started repeating over and over until she got to the phone and could dial it.  She was astounded that she was doing this all along and didn't even know it. I  then explained another short term memory method known as chunking. She cringed  and thought I was talking about the keg party the other night, but I explained  that chunking involves taking a large number or word and breaking it down into  smaller pieces that could be remembered easier. I also told her that she could  chunk together the first letters of a phrase to make it more accessible to her  memory retrieval system. I gave her the example of the New York Stock Exchange,  or N.Y.S.E. That helped her a lot, but she was concerned whether or not she  would remember it all for the final, so I told her the more rehearsing she did,  the deeper she would commit the information to memory.  					    
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