Week 2 - Chunking Flashcards
1
Q
What is a chunk?
A
- A chunk are bits of information which are united together through meaning or use.
- A network of neurons that are used to firing together so you can think a thought or perform an action smoothly and effectively.
2
Q
How can you form a chunk?
A
- Overview: „picture walk“ before starting to learn: look images, headlines, questions, … from the material
- Focus: attention on information you want to chunk (pomodoro) (how and what)
- Understand: the basic ideas first, using the focus and diffuse mode and recall
- Practice: Gain context to see how and why to use the chunk (“when”)
3
Q
How can you memorize learning material?
A
Using a simple process called “recall”:
- Read the material.
- Then look away from the material.
- See what you can recall from it without looking at the material.
4
Q
How does recall work?
A
- The retrieval process enhances learning and helps from chunks.
- Highlighting and synthesizing comments on margins of a page only after recall.
5
Q
What illusions of competence are there?
A
- Just reading or re-reading the material without using recall
- Drawing concept maps is less effective than recall
- Looking at the solution and just understanding without working it through
- Underlining and highlighting without recalling before
6
Q
What study methods help avoid illusions of competence?
A
- Recall, esp. outside original learning context
- Deliberate practice (tackling the hard stuff)
- Mini-testing yourself
- Making mistakes early and correcting them (fail early, fail often)
- Minimize highlighting and using paragraph summaries on margins
7
Q
What is the role of neuromodulatos for learning and memory?
A
- Neuromodulators carry the importance and value of material for the future (but not the content of the material.
- Neuromodulators are chemicals that influence how a neuron responds to other neurons and the subconscious mind.
8
Q
Which neuromodulators are there and what are they influencing?
A
- Acetylcholin: focussed learning and synaptic plasticity
- Dopamin: motivation and reward learning, released upon unexpected reward, affects decision making and value of sensory inputs
- Serotonin: affects social life and risk-taking behavior. Low serotonin > high risk-taking behavior
9
Q
What is the role of emotions in learning?
A
- Emotions are intertwined with perception and attention
- Emotions interact with learning and memory
10
Q
What are the values of a library of chunks?
A
- It’s the way to expertise, the number of chunks increases the number of potential combinations.
- Chunks can be combined in new and creative ways.
- Chunked concepts can be transferred to other disciplines / problems.
- The diffuse mode can help connect chunks in creative ways.
- Types and classes of problems can be found.
- Sequential and holistic thinking can be used.