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Effective Learning
- Four Keys to Success
You can significantly enrich your learning by incorporating
the following building blocks.
1. Prepare & Organize
- Define your goal as outlined above. In Stephen Covey's
book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, his second
habit is to begin with the end in mind.
- Identify your barriers and create a strategy to eliminate
them. If you have a challenge finding barriers, review my article
Be Aware of Obstructions to Your Learning.
- Based on the goal that you set, declare your intention for
each and every study or class session.
- Generate some curiosity about the subject at hand. You can
do this by brainstorming some wild and crazy questions – this
primes the pump.
- Examine the big picture. You can do this by creating a concept
map of the lecture or chapter outline.
- Establish a positive study environment. Consider air, water,
sound, light, privacy, and temperature.
- Finally, do a few mind-body exercises.
2. Attract the Information
- Write out what you already know.
- Even though class sessions don't afford you much control,
if you are prepared with an outline concept map, you will be
able to make, not just take, superior lecture notes. Remember,
the brain is naturally associative, so it's always looking
for links and connections. The concept map facilitates this.
- Take frequent study breaks in order to maximize primacy and
recency opportunities.
3. Practice, Elaborate, and Integrate
- Repeated review combats memory decay and entrenches the information
in your mind. One suggested review schedule is immediately
as you return from a short break, then at one day, two days,
one week, one month, and six months. These reviews are of just
the key points and take a very short time to complete.
- Convene peer groups to challenge and thrash out, summarize
and paraphrase, rehearse and present, simulate and role-play.
The power here is that those with whom you collaborate most
likely have learning styles, and therefore perceptions, differing
from yours.
- Explain your concept map to others.
- Play "What if?" Be creative by turning things upside-down
and inside-out, play devil's advocate, or temporarily embrace
a view opposite to your own.
- Produce a video or a song.
- Record yourself with a funny voice reading the lesson notes.
- Explain the subject to peers or younger siblings so that
they can understand it.
- Convert your lesson to a “Jeopardy” game.
- Produce a flow chart.
- Create flash cards.
- Create a mock test for a friend, and have a friend do the
same for you.
4. Associate, Activate, and Archive
- As each lesson is completed, build a concept map of the complete
course. You can work on this with your team of classmates.
- Your team can also discuss how the learning is relevant in
the real world.
- Debrief your efforts. What did you do well? What could you
have done better?
International speaker, Dr. Brian E. Walsh, is the author of
Unleashing Your Brilliance. He was a part-time journalist and
broadcaster before joining a major international company. For
much of his 30-year career he was involved in human resources,
specifically training.
While living in the arctic, Brian studied anthropology and Neurolinguistic
Programming (NLP), which prepared him for working with other
cultures. He was then transferred to China where he served as
his company’s GM.
After his return to Canada, he elected early retirement to further
his earlier interest in NLP and hypnotherapy. He returned to
formal study, and within four years had achieved his Ph.D. His
dissertation, which focused on accelerated learning techniques,
inspired his passion and his book, “Unleashing Your Brilliance”.
Dr. Walsh regularly conducts workshops on accelerated learning.
He is a master practitioner of NLP, an acupuncture detoxification
specialist, an EFT practitioner, and a clinical hypnotherapist.
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