Memory: A Five-Day Unit Lesson Plan For High School Psychology Teachers
Memory: A Five-Day Unit Lesson Plan For High School Psychology Teachers
Memory
A Five-Unit Lesson Plan for High School Psychology Teachers
This unit is aligned to the following content and performance standards of the National Standards for High
School Psychology Curricula (APA, 2011):
COGNITION DOMAIN STANDARD AREA: MEMORY
CONTENT STANDARDS
After concluding this unit, students understand:
1. Encoding of memory
2. Storage of memory
3. Retrieval of memory
CONTENT STANDARDS WITH PERFORMANCE STANDARDS
CONTENT STANDARD 1: Encoding of memory
Students are able to (performance standards):
1.1 Identify factors that influence encoding
1.2 Characterize the difference between shallow (surface) and deep (elaborate) processing
1.3 Discuss strategies for improving the encoding of memory
CONTENT STANDARD 2: Storage of memory
Students are able to (performance standards):
2.1 Describe the differences between working memory and long-term memory
2.2 Identify and explain biological processes related to how memory is stored
2.3 Discuss types of memory and memory disorders (e.g., amnesias, dementias)
2.4 Discuss strategies for improving the storage of memories
CONTENT STANDARD 3: Retrieval of memory
Students are able to (performance standards):
3.1 Analyze the importance of retrieval cues in memory
3.2 Explain the role that interference plays in retrieval
3.3 Discuss the factors influencing how memories are retrieved
3.4 Explain how memories can be malleable
3.5 Discuss strategies for improving the retrieval of memories
TOPSS thanks Julie A. Penley, PhD, of El Paso Community College, and Kristin A. Ritchey, PhD, of Ball State
University for their reviews of this lesson plan.
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Contents
Procedural Timeline
Introduction 3
Content Outline
Activities 31
Critical Thinking and Discussion Questions
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This project was supported by a grant from the American Psychological Foundation.
Copyright 2013 American Psychological Association.
A Five-Day Unit Lesson Plan for High School Psychology Teachers iii
Procedural
Timeline
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Procedural Timeline
Activity 3.3 Read the Label (The use of labels aids comprehension
and retention)
Introduction
Throughout the unit, students and teachers can add real-world examples using tools such as semantic encoding, self-referent thinking, and
effortful processing. Applications of the content can allow students to engage in more efficient and effective study time. Students are often interested in learning about memory, especially as it relates to their academic
as well as social world.
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Introduction
Content Outline
LESSON 1
Overview of the multisystem model
of memory
o to Activity 1.1
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Pervasive Role of Memory in Everyday Life
I. The multiple systems model posits that memory is not a single, unitary system that relies on one neuroanatomical circuit; rather memory is made up of multiple memory systems
that can work independently of one another.
The systems include declarative memory and nondeclarative memory. Each of these has several subsystems (described in the lessons that
follow):
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Content Outline
working
memory
episodic
memory
semantic
memory
priming
conditioning
motor/procedural
memory
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Lesson 2:
Sensory memory and working memory
I. Sensory memory
The sensory register is a memory system that works for a very brief period of time that stores a record of information received by receptor cells
until the information is selected for further processing or discarded.
A. The sensory memory register is specific to individual senses:
1. Iconic memory for visual information
2. Echoic memory for auditory information
B. Duration is very brief:
1. 150-500 msec for visual information
2. 1-2 sec for auditory information
C. The capacity of the sensory register is believed to be large.
D. Information in store is meaningless unless it is selected for further
processing by being attended to in an effortful way.
E. The general purpose of the sensory information stores seems to
be to keep information around, albeit briefly, for further processing. Processing information takes time, and its helpful to have an
initial store that maintains the presented information beyond its
physical duration.
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W T E S
Q A H M
O P W C
100
80
Whole
Partial
60
40
20
0
% Items Reported
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100
SHORTEST ISI
80
SHORT ISI
LONG ISI
60
LONGEST ISI
40
20
0
% Items Reported
3. Using a physical cue versus a semantic cue:
a. In the original study, participants were trained to link different auditory tones (high, medium, and low) with different lines in the matrix (top, middle, bottom), so they knew
to report the top line when they heard a high tone.
b. With this type of physical cue, participants were very successful in reporting all of the letters in one row.
c. However, when the cue given to participants required
they process the items in the row before responding (e.g.,
report all the vowels), participants were not successful in
reporting the items.
d. These findings indicate (1) participants hold items in the
sensory register in a raw form, and (2) processing the
items for meaning takes time. As the sensory register is
available for a short time only, the time it takes to process
for meaning results in information no longer being available in the sensory register.
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80
Semantic Cue
60
40
20
0
% Items Reported
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Lesson 3
Long-term memory: Encoding
I. The information processing model posits that long-term
memory is a system that encodes, stores, and retrieves information (students may understand the metaphor of a computer
here).
A. The way information is encoded critically influences later access to
that information.
B. A number of factors, described in detail below, influence encoding.
These factors include level of processing (shallow or deep) done
with an item, timing of practice (massed or spaced), how a person organizes information, a persons reference to the self during
learning, distinctiveness of an item, and testing during learning.
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B. Deep processing
1. Deep processing or elaborative rehearsal focuses on the
meaning of an item and involves forming associations between old and new information, with an effort on making elaborate connections with existing knowledge.
2. Examples include processing that focuses on the pleasantness of an item, the definition of an item, and the items relationship to other items.
3. When learning new vocabulary, it is best to associate the new
item, a vocabulary word, with something you already know
well.
4. Recent work by Nairne and colleagues (2010) demonstrates
that one effective way to process information to is to relate it
to your survival.
5. In preparing for a test, relating course material to information
you already know or to something personal in your own life
(self-referent) will enhance its retrieval.
o to Activity 3.2
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How to Study Actively
better retention than those who practiced typing for the same
total amount of time, but instead massed their practice (i.e.,
practiced 2 hours a day).
4. Cepeda, Vul, Rohrer, Wixted, and Pasher (2008) had participants study material (answers to trivia questions) in a massed
or spaced fashion and then tested their memory after various
delays.
a. They found that spaced practice (studying and then waiting a while and studying again) almost always improved
memory relative to massed practice (studying and then
studying again right away), even though the participants
in both the spaced- and massed-practice conditions spent
the exact same amount of time studying.
b. For example, with a retention interval of 10 weeks
(i.e., memory was tested 70 days after the last study period), the spaced practice group remembered 111% more
than the massed practice group.
5. When students are studying, they should be sure to space
study sessions over time. If a student plans to study 10 hours
for a test, devoting 1 hour each day for 10 days to studying or
2 hours a day for 5 days would be effective. Studying 5 hours
each day for the 2 days before the test would not be nearly as
effective.
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D. When students study, they should not simply reread their book or
even focus on their highlights. They should quiz themselves on
the material regularly, so they have a sense of what they know
and dont know and practice and strengthen the connections
among associated information in their brain.
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Lesson 4
Long-term memory: Retrieval
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Constructive Memory/Schemas: The Rumor Chain
I. Rate of forgetting
A. Retrieval is the process of getting (retrieving) information out of
memory storage.
B. Forgetting does not occur at a constant rate.
1. Ebbinghaus conducted experiments with nonsense syllabi. In
his studies, he demonstrated that most forgetting occurs early.
The rate of forgetting slows over time.
2. Bahrick (1984) has confirmed this pattern using more naturalistic materials. Bahrick examined memory for math and
foreign language learned in high school and for the names
and faces of high school classmates. He assessed forgetting
across several decades and demonstrated that most forgetting occurs early, and that some information persists over
time. The research shows what you remember after 3 years,
you are likely to remember for the rest of your life.
C. P
roactive and retroactive interference
Interference, which occurs when some information blocks or
disrupts the recall of other information, is believed to be a primary
source of forgetting. There are two types of interference: retroactive and proactive.
1. Retroactive interference occurs when new information
blocks or disrupts retrieval of older information. For example,
if you are trying to recall an old, obsolete password to an account but can only remember your current password, you are
experiencing retroactive interference.
2. Proactive interference occurs when old, previously learned
memories intrude with the recall of newer memories. For example, imagine your favorite pizza place moves across town
and changes phone numbers. If you drive to the old location
or call the old phone number, you are experiencing proactive
interference.
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a. Proactive interference highlights the importance of forgetting in our everyday lives. Failing to forget information
that has become obsolete will disrupt and impair memory
for current information.
b. For example, thinking about where you parked your
car yesterday may lead you to the wrong space today.
In a similar vein, its important to call your current
boyfriend by his actual name and not by your previous
boyfriends name.
3. Note. These two concepts are frequently confused by students. Teachers may want to reference the idea that the
problem is with the prefix or use a mnemonic to help students
remember the difference between these two terms.
4. The fan effect is another example in which remembering too
much can cause forgetting.
a. When we associate a number of memories with one cue,
we are slower and less accurate in retrieving any one
of those memories than we are if we associate only one
memory with a cue.
b. For example, if we have to remember Johns office phone
number, his cell phone number, his home phone number,
and his wifes phone number, we are less effective in recalling any one of those numbers than if we simply have
to remember his cell number.
c. To reduce interference, students should try associating
fewer items with any one cue.
5. Retrieval-induced forgetting occurs when we have many
memories associated with a cue, and we selectively rehearse
only one or two of those memories.
a. For example, if we know Johns work, cell, and home
numbers but repeatedly call only his cell, our memory for
his other numbers will diminish.
b. Practicing all the items associated with a single cue will
help reduce this interference. For example, if we are
going to dial Johns cell, we might also rehearse his other
phone numbers before we dial his cell.
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D. E
ncoding specificity and retrieval cues
1. Encoding specificity, a concept introduced by Tulving, states
that the most effective cues at retrieval are those that match
the cues present at encoding.
2. Tulving (1983) makes the case that much of our forgetting
is due to problems in accessibility or the failure to retrieve
memories that still reside in long-term memory. (This contrasts
with forgetting due to problems in availability, where the
memory is simply no longer stored in the brain.)
3. A particularly frustrating example of a memory failure due to
an accessibility problem occurs when we are in a tip-of-thetongue state. In that case, we are aware we know the information that we are searching for, but we simply cannot access it.
4. More generally, there are many situations in which memories
are available in long-term memory; but we have difficulty accessing them (e.g., the name of a well-known actor, some of
the details of a vacation we took last year) until we are given a
good cue (e.g., the first name of the actor, a photograph of us
playing miniature golf while on vacation), which, according to
the encoding specificity principle, is a cue that gets us to think
about the event like we did when we encoded it.
5. Examples:
a. Consider the prospective memory task of walking into the
kitchen from the bedroom and then forgetting why you
were going to the kitchen. A good way to remember your
intention is to get back to what you were doing when
you formed the intentionthat is, to walk back into
the bedroom.
b. Other good examples for high school students include
how the smell of suntan lotion can bring back memories
of a family beach trip or how a song can instantly bring
back memories of summer camp or time spent
with friends.
6. Context effects
a. Changing the physical context of the studying task
from the physical context of the testing task can impair
memory.
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7. State-dependent memory
a. Memory is best when a persons emotional or physiological state is the same when he/she is being tested as it
was when he/she was learning.
b. As with context effects, the change in the persons physiological state needs to be fairly significant to affect memory
(e.g., a persons not drinking a caffeinated soda while testing if the person drank one while learning should not affect
the persons performance much).
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Lesson 5
Memory in everyday life
I. Eyewitness testimony and the malleability of memory
A. Memory does not work like a video recorder: People do not encode or retrieve every aspect of an event perfectly.
B.What a person encodes depends on his or her priorities, his or her
past experience, his or her expectations, and the current demands.
C. What people remember about an event can also depend on what
happened after the event, their biases and expectations, and reports from others.
D. Biases at encoding: When arousal (state of alertness) is high,
people tend to narrow their focus to only certain aspects of an
event.
1. One example of an encoding bias is weapon focus. In this,
victims of a violent crime report great detail about the weapon but not about the perpetrator. People rely heavily on their
expectations and prior experience.
2. A second example of encoding bias is own-race bias, in which
we are better able to identify individuals from our own race
than individuals from a different race.
3. A third example of encoding bias is the reliance on schemas
(cognitive frameworks or concepts that help organize and
interpret information) as we process an event. Imagine being pulled over for a speeding ticket. After youve received a
ticket, a friend asks, Did the police officer ask you if you knew
how fast you were going? You believe he did, not necessarily
because you recall the question, but because you know that is
a common question for a traffic violation.
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An All-Purpose Memory Demonstration
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of human memory is to plan for future actions so we can respond appropriately to upcoming events (Klein, Robertson, &
Delton, 2010).
3. What is different about prospective memory? In a typical
retrospective memory task, you might be presented with a list
of words to learn; then at some point the experimenter puts
you in a retrieval modethat is, the experimenter asks you to
search memory and start remembering the list of words that
was presented earlier.
4. A critical feature of prospective memory is that the experimenter does not put participants in a retrieval mode at the
time remembering is to occur (Einstein & McDaniel, 2005). In
remembering to give a friend a message, for example, there
is no one there to remind you to check your memory for what
you were supposed to do when you encounter the friend. Instead, rather than processing your friend as a friend, you have
to somehow switch to seeing your friend as a cue for
an action.
5. A central question in the prospective memory literature arena
is, how does the cognitive system accomplish remembering
when we are not specifically trying to remember at the time?
B. Processes involved in prospective memory
1. Monitoring: In some situations, when we form an intention,
we initiate monitoring processes, which can sometimes feel
like active and conscious monitoring and sometimes occur
unconsciously.
2. Spontaneous retrieval: In other situations, we are likely to
rely on spontaneous retrieval processes. By spontaneous
retrieval, we mean the processing of a strong cue at retrieval
can cause an intention to be retrieved even when we are not
monitoring for that cue (experienced as an intention popping
into mind).
C. Types of prospective memory tasks
1. In a time-based prospective memory task, you plan to do an
action at a certain time, such as remembering to call a friend
in 10 minutes.
2. In an event-based task, you plan to complete an action when
you see a specific cue or event, for example, remembering to
give your friend a message when you see her.
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ACTIVITIES
Activity 1.1
Pervasive Role of Memory in
Everyday Life
Concept
Materials
Instructions
This activity requires 5 to 10 minutes, depending on the length of discussion, and should be conducted at the start of the class period.
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Activity 1.2
Categorizing Different Types of Memory
Developed by
Sheryl Freedman
Concept
Students can relate activities to the type of memory required for those
activities.
Materials
You will need the Categorizing Different Types of Memory form as a handout (see next page).
Instructions
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Answer Key
1. D
3. B
2. A
4. C
5. D
6. F
7. E
8. B
9. G
10. C
11. A
Flinching after your sibling says Titanic when he has repeatedly splashed
you with water on previous occasions of saying this word
Being fast to recognize the name of a famous artist when you had only
recently heard the name in passing
What you ate for dinner yesterday
Remembering you need to buy a gift for your friends birthday party tonight
Remembering a phone number as you dial it
Remembering the parts of the limbic system
continued on page 34
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For each of the following memory tasks, mark which type of memory
is represented:
Types of Memory
A. Semantic memory
B. Episodic memory
C. Working memory
D. Procedural
memory
E. Priming
F. Conditioning
G. Prospective
Memory Tasks
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Activity 2
Operation Span Task
Developed by
Instructions
In the Operation Span Task, participants are asked to read aloud and
perform a series of operations while they remember words. For example,
they might be shown the following on a computer monitor:
Is 3*3 +4 + 13? (Yes or no) FRUIT
They have to indicate whether or not the equation is correct and then
say the capitalized word aloud. Then that equation disappears, and the
participants are shown another equation and word such as:
Is 10/2 +4 = 7? (Yes or no) ROAD
Again, after the participants read the capitalized word aloud, the equation disappears, and the participants are shown another equation and
word such as:
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References
Engle, R. W. (2002). Working memory capacity as executive attention. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 11, 19-23.
Turner, M. L., & Engle, R. W. (1989). Is working memory capacity task dependent? Journal of Memory and Language, 28, 127-154.
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Activity 3.1
Repeated Exposure Versus
Deep Processing
Concept
Materials
Instructions
This demonstration will take about 5 minutes. First, ask students how
many times they believe they would need to hear and see a new concept
before they could remember it. Then, have them rate, on a scale of 1 to
10, their confidence in their ability to remember information if they see it
10 times; then 100 times; then 1000 times. Most students will be confident that they could remember something if they have seen it 1000 times.
Next, ask students how much experience they have in handling money.
Have them estimate the number of times they have seen a dollar bill, a
quarter, and a penny. Then, show them the following display of pennies
and ask them to identify the real penny.
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Point out to students that the chance of recognizing the real penny is
1 out of 6. In most cases, responses fall at chance in this task. The real
penny is the first one, in the upper left-hand corner. Highlight the fact that
although students have likely seen pennies more than 1000 times, they
do not remember them because they do not encode them in a meaningful
way. It is not the amount of time spent studying an item, but rather the
way that time is spent that is important.
Further Reading
Nickerson, R. S., & Adams, M. J. (July 1979). Long-term memory for a common object.
Cognitive Psychology, 11(3), 287-307.
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Activity 3.2
How to Study Actively
Developed by
Donald V. DeRosa
Concept
This activity focuses on learning and memory, and you can use it in conjunction with a discussion of research methods or experimental design.
No prior knowledge of psychology is assumed, and there is no advance
preparation required. The activity can be used with any size class as an
in-class activity.
The activity demonstrates to students the importance of studying actively and examines techniques that enhance recall. The experiment,
based on work by Hyde and Jenkins (1969), is best performed using two
groups of students, one for each condition. For classroom purposes, however, one group will do. Using one group avoids the practical difficulties of
dividing one class into sections. The effect the experiment demonstrates
is so powerful, it will work anyway.
Furthermore, you can use the fact that you conducted the experiment
improperly as the basis for discussion after the experiment is over. Be
sure to tell the students this was not the proper way to conduct the experiment and explain why not. Note the first (pleasant/unpleasant) condition
should always result in much higher recall than the second (e) condition.
By using one group only and ordering the conditions with the pleasant/unpleasant condition first, you have set things up to work against the effect
you are trying to demonstrate. However, please see the note at the end
of the next section on how you can do this demonstration by dividing your
class into two groups.
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Materials
Instructions
Introduce the experiment by informing the class that effective study techniques are based on the results of experimental research in human learning. The principles underlying this research should be discussed after the
activity.
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trail
deep
fish
skate
flower
bird
coat
church
clock
sample metal
fork
bank
move
travel
truck
paint
rain
grass
time
pipe
soap
Ask students to write down as many words as they can recall in any
order. Allow 90 seconds for recall, then read the list; ask the students to
count how many they recalled.
Read the following instructions: Now we are going to carry out a
demonstration that will illustrate some important facts about how people
deal with information. The first step in studying well is to be sure you have
adequately gotten the facts. To simulate this, I will read a list of words.
For each word, decide if it contains the letter e. If it does, make a mark
on a sheet of paper. If it does not, do nothing. Do not write the word,
decide if it has an e in it and keep a tally. [You may wish to have a sheet
of paper numbered from 1 to 24 for each condition.] Again, although I
will later ask you to recall the words, this is not important right now. You
should give your full attention to the task of determining if the words contain the letter e. Are there any questions? If you are ready, I will begin.
Read the words at 5-second intervals.
* In their original experiment, Hyde and Jenkins did not indicate that a later recall of the words would be required. Theirs was
therefore a purely incidental learning task. We have eliminated this because students in a group become somewhat vocal
when surprised by the request to recall the words, and sometimes they feel deceived.
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shade
dress
count
short
desk
horse
fire
motor
money month
song
story
pitch
bureau
coal
garden belt
foot
dinner
hammer train
magic
monkey
door
Again, ask them to write down as many words as they recall, in any
order. Allow 90 seconds for recall, then read the list and ask the students
to mark the words they recalled correctly.
Discussion
Now you can explain the purpose of the study. A word whose meaning
is processed (as in the first list) should be better remembered than one
whose letters are processed. See if this is true by asking for a show of
hands: How many students remembered more words from the second list
than from the first? Write the number on the board. The phenomenon is
very robust, but if you do not get the expected result, try to elicit reasons
from your students. Hyde and Jenkins had nearly twice as many words
recalled in the pleasantness condition as in the e condition.
Ask the students to suppose that you had asked them to intentionally
remember the words. Would they have done better? Most will say yes,
but Hyde and Jenkins found no difference for intentional versus incidental
learning in this task. Discuss how the results of research do not always
prove what everyone knows. Then ask what was wrong about the way
the demonstration was conducted. Students may note that it would be
better to use different groups of subjects. Some may spot the order
problem, and you can explain how the lists would be counterbalanced
in a real experiment. You should discuss what the experiment says about
the value of trying to study by memorizing the text, as opposed to trying
to understand it. Point out that the amount of time was the same for
each list.
Note. To counterbalance the lists in your classroom, you could distribute
instructions before the demonstration prompting half the class to listen to
words for pleasantness/unpleasantness and half the class to listen to
words for the e. Students should be instructed not to discuss anything
with others throughout the demonstration. You could then read a combined list of words and then ask them to write down as many words as
they recall, in any order. Allow 90 seconds for recall, then read the list and
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ask the students to mark the words they recalled correctly. You could then
ask for a show of hands of how many words were correctly recalled. The
class should demonstrate different numbers based on their instructions.
You can ask students to consider why students recalled different numbers of words, and either the students will guessor you can revealthe
different instructions. As stated above, you can explain the purpose of the
study and discuss what the experiment says about the value of trying to
study by memorizing the text, as opposed to trying to understand it.
Reference
Hyde, T. S., & Jenkins, J. J. (1969). Differential effects of incidental tasks on the organization of recall of a list of highly associated words. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 82, 472-481.
Copyright 1987 by the American Psychological Association. The official citation that
should be used in referencing this material is:
DeRosa, D.V. (1987). How to study actively. In V. P. Makosky, L. G. Whittemore, & A. M.
Rogers (Eds.), Activities handbook for the teaching of psychology (Vol. 2; pp. 72-74).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
No further reproduction or distribution is permitted without written permission from the
American Psychological Association.
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Activity 3.3
Read the Label
(The use of labels aids
comprehension and retention)
From Bransford & Johnson, 1972
Concept
Instructions
This demonstration will take about 10 minutes. First, have students listen
to the following paragraph:
The procedure is quite simple. First, you arrange items
into different groups. Of course, one pile may be sufficient
depending on how much there is to do. If you have to go somewhere else due to lack of facilities, that is the next step; otherwise, you are pretty well set. It is important not to overdo things.
That is, it is better to do too few things at once than too many.
In the short run this may not seem important, but complications
can easily arise.
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Once they have heard the paragraph, have them rate their comprehension of the paragraph, and then try to recall as much of it as possible.
Comprehension and recall will be fairly low. Then, have half the class put
their heads down. To the remaining students, show this label: WASHING
LAUNDRY. Then have all students listen to the passage again. Test everyone again on comprehension and retention. Those given the label will
generally understand and remember the information better. Highlight the
need for students to read their chapter titles and summaries before they
dive in to their textbooks. Previewing the material takes very little time
and gives a significant boost to comprehension and retention.
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This demonstration highlights the fact that you should preview your
course chapters before you start to read. Review the headings in the
chapter and the questions at the end of the chapter before you begin.
See also
Klein, M. (1981). Context and memory. In L. T. Benjamin, Jr., & K. D. Lowman (Eds.),
Activities handbook for the teaching of psychology (Vol. 1, p. 83). washington, dC:
American Psychological Association.
Reference
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Activity 4.1
Constructive Memory/Schemas:
The Rumor Chain
Developed by
Concept
Materials
You will need a story that is short enough to allow retelling several times
in class, but detailed enough that students are unlikely to remember all
aspects of it. A sample is included in the following section.
Instructions
Send three to five students out of the classroom (and out of earshot).
Now read aloud a paragraph-length story to a student whose task is to
repeat the story as completely as possible to one of the students who is
brought back into the classroom. The newcomers task is to repeat the
story to the next student who is readmitted and so on until the last student
who hears the story repeats it to the class. Each rendition of the story
should be loud enough so that everyone in the class can hear.
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Be sure to give instructions to the class to not laugh when errors are
made because this may cause the storyteller to notice and attempt to
correct mistakes. To facilitate discussion, instruct the class to take notes
as each student tells the story, thus tracking the errors made.
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Discussion
The errors made in each successive telling of the story are usually quite
predictable and follow some basic principles of constructive memory.
First, the story gets progressively shorter as some details, such as the
name of the revolutionary group and sometimes the flights origin and
destination are left out. This is referred to as leveling.
Second, some detailsperhaps the caliber of the gun, or especially
for women students, the gender of the pilotare often retained; this is
referred to as sharpening. Because individuals retain different details, this
leads to a discussion of the schemas already in long-term memory that
help us retain information in a meaningful fashion and how these schemas differ for different people based on personal experience.
Third, because many elements of the story are encoded semantically (i.e., as the meaning or gist of the story rather than as exact words),
they are likely to be altered in line with each tellers schemas. For example, because for many students, even today, pilots are men and flight
attendants are women, Jane Randall may end up as the flight attendant
and Jack Swanson may become the pilot. Further, the hijacker is almost
always referred to as a man, often as an Arab, even though no gender or
ethnic information is in the story. You can relate this phenomenon to false
assumptions made about the identity of those who blew up the federal
building in Oklahoma City in 1995. The open cockpit door may evoke an
image of an outside door, such that the hijacker is described as falling out
of the plane. Finally, the schema of angry passengers may cause expansion of the story to include their beating, or even killing, the hijacker.
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By asking the class to describe how the story changed with the retelling, you should be able to illustrate a number of the principles listed
here. You can then go on to discuss the role of schemas and constructive
memory in other phenomena, such as racial prejudice and errors in eyewitness testimony.
Writing Component
Two different writing assignments can follow this demonstration. For the
first one, have students write a paper in the form of a letter to a friend or
family member describing how memory works. The letter should address
the common view of memory as a sort of video recorder, why that view is
incorrect, and the importance of constructive memory. Shared examples
of constructive memory between the student and the recipient of the letter
could be supplied to illustrate constructive memory. For example, siblings
often have different memories of the same incident in their childhoods.
Another assignment would be to have students write a paper in the
form of a newspaper column on the role of memory in eyewitness testimony or repressed-memory cases. The paper should incorporate the rumor chain demonstration in a discussion of the issues surrounding these
controversial topics. Remind students that their audience would be educated, but not necessarily knowledgeable about psychological principles.
Alternative Demonstration
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Activity 4.2
The Importance of Cues
(Mantyla Cue Demonstration)
Materials and Concept
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content
outline
ticipants to recall the items, and they recalled only about 60 words. When
given their own cues, however, they recalled about 552 words92% of
the words! You might be wondering whether this impressive performance
reflects good memory when you are given your own cues or the ability
to guess the word when shown three associates. Mantyla tested this by
giving a new group of participants the associations that other people had
written (after having not seen the list) and found only 17% recall in this
case. Thus, it appears that presenting you with your own cues stimulates
effective retrieval (and not effective guessing). Generally, Mantylas results demonstrate the power of memory when given your own detailed
cues at retrieval.
Reference
Mantyla, T. (1986). Optimizing cue effectiveness: Recall of 500 and 600 incidentally
learned words. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 12, 66-71.
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Activity 5
An All-Purpose Memory Demonstration
Concept
The demonstration requires only that you ask the class to listen as you
read, at about one word per second, the following list:
bed, quilt, dark, silence, fatigue, clock, snoring, night, toss, tired,
night, artichoke, turn, night, rest, dream
After a brief pause, give the class 30 seconds or so to write down as
many of the words as they can recall.
When time is up, ask how many students recall the word sleep. Many
students will say they recall the word sleep. Such a recollection must
be constructive memory, since this word was not on the list. This also
helps demonstrate the fallibility of memory.
Now repeat the list in order and ask for a show of hands by those who
correctly recalled each word. By plotting on the blackboard the frequency
of correct recall, you should be able to produce a reasonable approximation to the classic serial position curve. Recall scores should be best at the
beginning of the list (primacy effect) and at the end of the list (recency effect). Words in the middle of the list should have the lowest scores, except
for artichoke which should be recalled better than its neighbors because
of its semantic distinctiveness; it has nothing to do with the topic of sleep.
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content
outline
The word night should also have a particularly high score, not only
because of the recency effect but also because its higher frequency on
the list allowed for better rehearsal.
Finally, count the number of people who correctly recalled both toss
and turn. Due to chunking, recalling one should evoke the other. (Ask
for a show of hands by those who recalled these words in sequence on
their lists.)
Further Reading
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Critical
Thinking and
Discussion
Questions
Critical Thinking Exercises for Memory
Exercise A
Roger is at a wedding reception where he has been introduced to over 50 guests whom he has never met. He would like
to remember as many names as possible. Describe the role that
sensory storage, short-term memory, and long-term memory
play for Roger in this situation. Analyze what is happening in
terms of the three stages of the information processing model of
memory: encoding, storage, and retrieval. Finally, identify strategies Roger might use to improve his ability to remember names.
Exercise B
Have students imagine they are members of a jury and have listened to
an eyewitness to the crime. His information is taken very seriously by the
other members of the jury. Explain to them why eyewitness memory may
not be as reliable as they believe it to be.
Exercise C
Exercise D
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Resources,
References, and
Recommended
Reading
Resources
Great Memory Demonstrations
Dr. Timothy Bender, Missouri State University
http://courses.missouristate.edu/timothybender/mem/mydemos.
html
Students can test their iconic memory based on Sperlings partial report technique through the activities presented on this website (specifically, the Original Astound Demonstrations). Please note that the
software is old and that some demonstrations may not work. Potential
users should test each demonstration to determine if it is suitable for
use in their classroom. Anyone who uses the site may want to download the demonstrations and keep them for instructional use.
Memory Experiments From Neuroscience for Kids
Eric Chudler, PhD, University of Washington
http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/chmemory.html
Several memory experiments, including one on chunking, can be
found through this Neuroscience for Kids website.
Preparing Teachers for a Changing World: What Teachers Should
Learn and be Able to Do
A good activity on self-referent memory appears in Chapter 2 of Preparing Teachers for a Changing World: What Teachers Should Learn
and be Able to Do (Darling-Hammond & Bransford, 2005), available
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Videos
American Psychological Association. (Producer). The seven sins of
memory: An update. [Presentation by Daniel Schacter]. Washington, DC:
Author. Available from http://www.youtube.com/user/TheAPAVideo
Finkelstein, S. (Producer). (2009). Eyewitness, Part 1. [Television series episode]. In J. Fager (Executive producer), 60 Minutes. New
York: CBS News. Available from http://www.cbsnews.com/video/
watch/?id=5153451n
Finkelstein, S. (Producer). (2009). Eyewitness, Part 2. [Television series episode]. In J. Fager (Executive producer), 60 Minutes. New
York: CBS News. Available from http://www.cbsnews.com/video/
watch/?id=5153459n&tag=related;photovideo
The following YouTube videos, originally from Annenberg Learners The
Mind series, may be of interest to teachers:
The Mind: Life Without Memory: The Case of Clive Wearing Part 1a
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmkiMlvLKto
The Mind: Life Without Memory: The Case of Clive Wearing Part 2a
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lu9UY8Zqg-Q
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References
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control processes. In K. W. Spence & J. T. Spence (Eds.), The psychology of learning
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Baddeley, A. D., & Longman, D. J. (1978). The influence of length and frequency of
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Bahrick, H. P. (1984). Semantic memory content in permastore: Fifty years of learning
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Carrier, M., & Pashler, H. (1992). The influence of retrieval on retention. Memory and
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Cepeda, N. J., Vul, E., Rohrer, D., Wixted, J. T., & Pashler, H. (2008). Spacing effects in
learning. Psychological Science, 19, 1095-1102.
Chase, K., & Ericsson, W. G. (1982). Exceptional memory. American Scientist, 70, 607615.
Chase, W. G., & Simon, H. A. (1973). The minds eye in chess. In W. G. Chase (Ed.),
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Conrad, R. (1964). Acoustic confusions in immediate memory. British Journal of
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Craik, F. I. M., & Lockhart, R. S. (1972). Levels of processing: A framework for memory
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Einstein, G. O., & McDaniel, M. A. (2005). Prospective memory: Multiple retrieval processes. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14, 286-290.
Gates, A. I. (1917). Recitation as a factor in memorizing. Archives of Psychology, 6(40).
Godden, D. R., & Baddeley, A. D. (1975). Context-dependent memory in two natural
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Loftus, E. F., & Pickerell, J. E. (1995). The formation of false memories. Psychiatric
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AMERICAN
PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION
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