You can instantly retrieve more information faster and easier by memorizing data in organized patterns.
Here are 8 ways to make information cement in your mind:
1. Acronyms
I’ve used acronyms throughout my college and grad school career.
They’ve helped me memorize information for class presentations, and
helped me memorize details for exams. An acronym is simply a word
wherein each letter represents another word. For example: HOMES (The
Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior)
2. Acrostics
Acrostics are sentences in which the first letter of each word helps you
remember items in a series. For example: Zoe Cooks Chowder In Pink
Pots in Miami (The Essential Minerals: Zinc, Calcium, Chromium, Iron,
Potassium, Phosphorus, Iodine, Magnesium).
3. Act it Out
Use your acting ability to make a connection with the material you’re
trying to learn. For example: reenact a dialog between two historic
figures – or carry on a debate between two different philosophers,
politicians or literary critics.
4. Categories
Organize information into broad categories to help you remember
information faster. For example: Types of Joints in the Body
(Immovable, Slightly Movable, Freely Movable).
5. Peg Words
Develop a chain of associations between whatever list you need to
memorize and a peg word. Peg words are associated with numbers (e.g.
zero is hero; one is a bun; two is a shoe; three is a tree; four is a
door; five is a hive; six is sticks; seven is heaven; eight is a gate;
nine is wine; and ten is a hen). Here’s how peg words work with the
atomic numbers in a periodic table: (1) Imagine a hydrogen hotdog on a
bun; (2) Imagine a helium shoe balloon; (3) Imagine a lit tree on fire
(lithium); (4) a door made of berries (beryllium); (5) a hive with bored
bees (boron); and the list can go on. The odd pairing helps you
memorize information quickly.
6. Rhymes
Make up a silly rhyme or pun to help you memorize information. For
example: Brown vs. Board of Education ended public-school segregation.
7. Recordings
Make a recording of yourself giving a lecture about the subject you’re
studying. This is especially helpful for foreign language classes or a
vocabulary section on a standardized test.
8. Visualizations
Turn an abstract idea into an image of something that is as specific as
possible. For example, visualize a scene from a historic period. Make
it as real as possible in your mind. Use all your senses and imagine
what it must smell like, feel like, etc. The more specific you are, the
more you’ll remember.
What are some strategies you use to memorize information faster?
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