HOW TO STUDY EFFECTIVELY
FOR SCHOOL OR COLLEGE
[TOP 6 SCIENCE-BASED STUDY SKILLS]
3,013,449 views•Dec 15, 2016
MEMORIZE ACADEMY
414K subscribers
How to study effectively with 6 essential skills. Boost your study
performance with strategies recommended by science - The ANSWER Method.
These tips are for high school or university students preparing for
exams or wanting to learn more effectively.
For free downloadable posters about these six strategies for effective
learning, click this link - https://www.dropbox.com/s/sofzb2m3sqz...
This video is a collaboration between The Learning Scientists
(http://www.learningscientists.org/) and Memorize Academy
(https://www.memorize.academy).
EXAMPLES of specific Elaboration questions from MATH
You're studying calculus. The topic is “derivatives”. How do
derivatives work? Well, they are the rate of the change. How does that work?
You take a look at one point, then you take a look at a prior point, over some
interval. And then you take the difference divided by the interval. As that
interval approaches zero, you have the instantaneous rate of change. Why does
this happen? Because “instantaneous” means that the interval is nothing.
SCIENCE
Imagine you are studying neural communication, maybe in a biology,
neuroscience, or psychology class.
How does neural communication work? If we look at one neuron, the
dendrites receive messages from many other neurons, and then the messages
converge in the soma. If there is enough of a positive charge within the soma,
then an action potential will occur, and an electrical signal goes down the
axon. When the signal reaches the terminal buttons, neurotransmitters release into
the synapse where they communicate with the dendrites of the next neuron.
Why does this happen? The neurotransmitters are chemicals that allow
neurons to communicate with one another. The pattern of activation among
different neurons (which neurons fire, how quickly, what neurotransmitters they
release) determines the message in your brain.
You might then ask, how does the axon work? The axon is a long
tail-like structure that produces the electrical signal.
How does the signal travel? The axon is covered in myelin sheath, a
fatty substance that insulates the axon. The myelin sheath works like the
rubber around the cord of an electrical appliance, and it serves to make the
electricity travel faster.
Why have myelin sheath? Because we need our neurons to be able to send
signals fast, since we need to be able to react, make decisions, move quickly,
perceive feeling in our skin instantly, etc.
Make sure to compare ideas to learn how they are similar and different.
For example, an axon and terminal buttons are both parts of a neuron; but, the
axon sends an electrical signal while the terminal buttons release chemicals.
Both Schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease are related to the neurotransmitter
dopamine, but Schizophrenia is the result of too much dopamine while
Parkinson’s disease is the result of too little dopamine.
Also, try to make connections to your own memories or experiences, and
compare ideas to learn how they are similar and different. We already made the
connection from myelin sheath on axons to the rubber on cords to electrical
appliances.
Here is another example: a family member or close friend who suffers
from Schizophrenia disease is suffering from too much dopamine. This means that
too much dopamine is being released, by the terminal buttons, into the synapse.
A doctor could give them a drug to reduce the dopamine in their brain, called a
dopamine antagonist. If too much of this drug is used, the patient might begin
developing symptoms similar to Parkinson’s disease.
How would a dopamine antagonist work? … continue asking yourself
elaborative questions!
HISTORY
Imagine you’re studying World War II, and the attack on Pearl Harbor.
You could ask yourself, how did this attack happen? On December 7,
1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked the United States Naval Base at Pearl
Harbor. The attack included Japanese fighter planes, bombers, and torpedo
planes.
Why did this happen? The Japanese intended to destroy the United
States’ Pacific Fleet so that it could not interfere with Japanese operations.
Here you could also ask another type of question: What was the result
of this historic event? Well, Japanese casualties were light, while they
damaged eight U.S. Navy battleships. The Arizona was among those that the
Japanese sunk, and was not raised from the shallow water. U.S. aircrafts were
also destroyed, and 2,403 Americans were killed (1,178 were injured).
Why is this event important? The day after the attack, Roosevelt
delivered his Infamy Speech, the United States declared war on Japan, and
Japanese-Americans were then relocated to internment camps.
You could then go on: how did the U.S. enter the war? How did the Pearl
Harbor attack lead up to the release of the atomic bomb? How did the war end?
And so on. There are so many ways to
explain the idea and add details!
Grateful thanks to MEMORIZE ACADEMY and YouTube.
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