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Mrs. Angermeier, Resource Teacher



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Memory Tips & Strategies

MEMORY TIPS & STRATEGIES

Memory has many components.  This is an explanation of those components of 
memory and ways you can recognize your child's strengths and weaknesses.  
Understanding this will help you guide your child in the most effective way 
to study.

We take in information through our senses.  In a school setting, we 
primarily use our ears (auditory) and eyes (visual).  We also use feeling 
and touch (tactile-kinesthetic) when we remember how to move parts of our 
body-like the hand for writing, the foot for kicking a ball, or our mouth to 
make a sound.

After information is taken in through one of the senses, it settles briefly 
in short-term memory while we decide whether to file it or throw it away.  
If we file it, it goes into long-term memory.  We use active working memory 
to hold all relevant information for a current activity together.

It is critical that children become active participants in improving their 
abilities.  They will need long term, patient guidance in understanding 
their specific strengths and weaknesses and how to use them effectively.  
They also need to realize that everyone has strengths and weaknesses-some 
just show up more in the school setting.  We need to keep in mind that 
compensating for memory weaknesses take more effort and can be exhausting.

Consider strengths and weakness in the senses when deciding how to best 
enter things into memory.  You want to teach the child how to use his strong 
senses as the main way to learn information by changing the way it was 
presented if necessary.  The other senses will become more supportive as 
they are improved.

An example of a visual strength would be a child who remembers after limited 
exposure where things are at the store, how to get around a park or complex, 
and where the car is parked.  Encourage them to pay attention and try to 
remember and then see how well they can do.  A child with an auditory memory 
weakness might be well behaved but seldom follows through completely with 
what they are told to do.

IMPROVING VISUAL AND AUDITORY MEMORY

Relate auditory memory to not only remembering words of a song, but how you 
can actually hear the singer singing it in your head.  I call this the "tape 
recorder in your brain".  They should practice being able to not only 
remember what someone said, but be able to actually hear it.  They can 
further this with the use of a tape recorder.  Reading their own notes into 
a tape recorder and listening to them while getting ready for bed or school 
reinforces this sense.  (Listening right before bed is good because we 
remember things better without other distractions before we go to sleep).  
Making up jingles, poems, and silly sentences can be a helpful way for a 
student to use auditory cues to help them remember.

Examples:
1.  To spell GEOGRAPHY, learn this sentence-
    "George eats old gray rats and paints houses yellow."
2.  The first letters of the Great Lakes spells HOMES.
3.  Roy G. Biv is spelled from the colors of the spectrum in order.
4.  To drive a 4X4, you have to be 16.
5.  Shy Anne (Cheyenne) lives in Wyoming and her cousin Helena lives in 
    Montana.

Visual memory is like a "camera in your brain".  Students can practice 
visualizing about vacations or parties.  They can then begin to make up a 
picture to help them remember things presented orally.  They might actually 
imagine themselves performing the task they have just been given.  Drawing 
pictures, making charts, and building models are ways visual skills can 
support memory.  Reviewing good notes also builds visual memory.  Have them 
close their eyes to picture what was written on the page.  (This method can 
also be used with spelling words.)  Have them picture where you just wrote 
the word or information on the board or a piece of paper.  If you color code 
or highlight tricky letters, draw a shape around words, or highlight key 
words, they can learn to picture that information.

Using all senses at the same time focuses attention better because all 
senses are being used (and there is no opportunity for attention to 
wander.)  By seeing, saying aloud, hearing, and feeling how it is to write 
(finger write on table), the child is sending the information in through 
several channels at the same time.  Using large movements with both arms in 
the air writing spelling words can help enter information and coordinate 
knowledge between both sides of the brain.

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Last Modified: Saturday, January 03, 2009
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