The Study Cycle
This is a general pattern that is recommended to follow that can lead to successful outcomes in student understanding.
Going from Passive Studying to Active Studying
Passive studying typically only involves surface-level work - such as re-reading notes, re-watching lectures or writing notes in class word-for-word from the presentation slides. Practices usually only promote the "illusion of knowledge," meaning a student can follow what's going on, but will often easily forget and lose the learning over time. Active studying involves student-led practices that reinforce learning material piece-by-piece to seek and synthesize understanding. These practices help “train the brain” to process information into long-term memory by intentional (and planned) repetition, engaging with material, self-testing and making connections.
Class Material | Ways to Active Study | Why these are effective |
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PowerPoint slides |
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Lecture Notes |
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Textbook or homework problems |
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Readings and articles |
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Lab reports |
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