guru
Super Member (250+ posts)
288 Posts Gratitude: 51
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Posted - 12/06/2016 : 14:55:20
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Use flash-cards for new information you learn, whether it's math, or history, or a chapter from a book of literature, or whatever...learning is memorization; even rational understanding of any academic subject-matter requires memory.
Keep a notepad and promptly write down 'key phrases' of the material you're reading through. Arrange notes thematically.
Be systematic. Diligently write anything worthy of note, in as much as an ordered fashion as you can keep the information.
This will help a lot. If you write down relevant information, this will amplify your memorization processes.
Carefully look over what you wrote before beginning the next chapter or subject-matter. Read over your notes and get an intuition if there's 'something missing.'
When trudging through a book, write down a few notes for each chapter you read - this will help in the memorization process....go over your personal notes - if there's still something unaccounted for, add a footnote. |
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