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2/5 of time devoted to recitation 54 28 41 25
3/5 of time devoted to recitation 57 37 42 26
4/5 of time devoted to recitation 74 48 42 26
The time devoted to study was in all cases 9 minutes, and this time was divided between reading and recitation in different proportions as stated in the first column at the left. Reading down the next column, {340} we find that when nonsense syllables were studied and the test was conducted immediately after the close of the study period, 35 per cent. were remembered when all the study time had been devoted to reading, 50 per cent, when the last 1/5 of the study time had been devoted to recitation, 54 per cent when the last 2/5 of the time had been devoted to recitation; and so on. The next column shows the per cents. remembered four hours after the study period. Each subject in these experiments had before him a sheet of paper containing the lesson to be studied, and he simply read it till the experimenter gave a signal to recite, after which the subject recited the lesson to himself as well as he could, prompting himself from the paper as often as necessary, and proceeded, thus till the end of the study period. The subjects in these particular experiments were eighth grade children; adult subjects gave the same general results.
Three facts stand out from the table: (1) Reading down the columns, we see that recitation was always an advantage. (2) The advantage was more marked in the test conducted four hours after study than in the test immediately following the study. To be sure, there is always a falling off from the immediate to the later test; there is bound to be some forgetting when the lesson has been studied for so short a time as here; but the forgetting proceeds more slowly after recitation than after all reading. Recitation fixes the matter more durably. (3) The advantage of recitation is less marked in the meaningful material than in case of nonsense syllables, though it is marked in both cases. The reason is that meaningful material can better be read observantly, time after time, than is possible with nonsense material. Continued reading of nonsense material degenerates into a mere droning, while in repeatedly reading meaningful material the learner who is keenly interested in mastering the pa.s.sage is sure to keep his mind ahead of his eyes to some extent, so that his reading becomes half recitation, after all.
Whence comes the advantage of recitation? It has a twofold advantage: it is more stimulating, and it is more satisfying. When you know you are going to attempt recitation at once, you are stimulated to observe positions, peculiarities, relations.h.i.+ps, and meanings, and thus your study {341} goes on at a higher level than when the test of your knowledge is still far away, with many readings still to come. You are also stimulated to manipulate the material, by way of grouping and rhythm.
On the side of satisfaction, recitation shows you what parts of the lesson you have mastered and gives you the glow of increasing success.
It shows you exactly where you are failing and so stimulates to extra attention to those parts of the lesson. It taps the instincts of exploration, manipulation, and mastery much more effectively than continued re-reading of the same lesson can do. The latter becomes very uninteresting, monotonous and fatiguing.
Perhaps, after all, the greatest advantage of reciting is that it makes you do, in learning, the very act that you have later to perform in the test; for what you have finally to do is to recite the lesson without the book. When reading, you are doing something different; and if it were altogether different, it probably would not help you at all towards success in the test. But since intelligent reading consists partly in antic.i.p.ating and outlining as you go, it is a sort of half recitation, it is halfway doing what you are trying to learn to do.
Memorizing consists in performing an act, now, with a.s.sistance, that you later wish to perform without a.s.sistance; and recitation first stimulates you to fas.h.i.+on the act conformably to the object in view, and then exercises you in performing that act.
s.p.a.ced and uns.p.a.ced repet.i.tion.
Another question on the economical management of memorizing: Is it better to keep steadily going through the lesson till you have it, or to go through it at intervals? If you were allowed a certain time, and no more, in which to prepare for examination on a certain memory lesson, how could the study time be best distributed? This question also has received a very definite answer.
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s.p.a.ced repet.i.tions are more effective than uns.p.a.ced. In an experiment of Pieron, a practised subject went through a list of twenty numbers with an interval of only thirty seconds between readings, and needed eleven readings to master the list. But a similar list, with five-minute intervals, was mastered in six readings; and the number of readings went down to five with an interval of ten minutes, and remained the same for longer intervals up to two days. With this particular sort of lesson, then, ten minutes was a long enough interval, and two days not too long, to give the greatest economy of time spent in actual study.
In a somewhat different experiment in another laboratory, lists of nonsense syllables were studied either two, four, or eight times in immediate succession, and this was repeated each day till a total of twenty-four readings had been given to each list; then, one day after the last reading of each list, the subjects were tested as to their memory of it. The result appears in the adjoining table.
EFFECT OF s.p.a.cED STUDY ON ECONOMY OF MEMORIZING (From Jost)
Distribution of the 24 readings Total score Total score of Mr. B. of Mr. M.
8 readings a day for 3 days 18 7
6 readings a day for 4 days 39 31
2 readings a day for 12 days 58 55
The widest distribution gave the best score. Undoubtedly, then, if you had to memorize a poem or speech, you would get better value for time spent if you read it once or twice at a time, with intervals of perhaps a day, than if you attempted to learn it at one continuous sitting. What exact s.p.a.cing would give the very greatest economy would depend on the length and character of the lesson.
s.p.a.ced study also fixes the matter more durably. Every student knows that continuous "cramming" just before an {343} examination, while it may accomplish its immediate purpose, accomplishes little for permanent knowledge.
When we say that s.p.a.ced repet.i.tions give best results in memorizing, that does not mean that study generally should be in short periods with intervals of rest; it says nothing one way or the other on that question. The probability is, since most students take a certain time to get well "warmed up" to study, that fairly long periods of consecutive study would yield larger returns than the same amount of time divided into many short periods. What we have been saying here is simply that repet.i.tion of the _same material_ fixes it better in memory, when an interval (not necessarily an empty interval) elapses between the repet.i.tions.
Whole versus part learning.
In memorizing a long lesson, is it more economical to divide it into parts, and study each part by itself till mastered, or to keep the lesson entire and always go through the whole thing? Most of us would probably guess that study part by part would be better, but experimental results have usually been in favor of study of the whole.
If you had to memorize 240 lines of a poem, you would certainly be inclined to learn a part at a time; but notice the following experiment. A young man took two pa.s.sages of this length, both from the same poem, and studied one by the whole method, the other by the part method, in sittings of about thirty-five minutes each day. His results appear in the table.
LEARNING Pa.s.sAGES OF 240 LINES, BY WHOLE AND PART METHODS (Pyle and Snyder)
Method of study Number of days Total number of required minutes required
30 lines memorized per day, then whole reviewed till it could be recited 12 431
3 readings of whole per day till it could be recited 10 348
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Here there was an economy of eighty-three minutes, or nearly twenty per cent., by using the whole method as against the part method.
Similar experiments have regularly given the same general result.
However, the matter is not quite so simple, as, under certain conditions, the results tend the other way. Let us consider a very different type of learning test. A "pencil maze", consisting of pa.s.sages or grooves to be traced out with a pencil, while the whole thing was concealed from the subject by a screen, was so arranged that it could be divided into four parts and each part learned separately.
Four squads of learners were used. Squads A and B learned the maze as a whole, squads C and D part by part. Squads A and C learned by s.p.a.ced trials, two trials per day. Squad B learned the whole thing at one sitting; while squad D, which came off best of all, learned one part a day for four days, and on the fifth day learned to put the parts together. The results appear in the adjoining table, which shows the average time required to master the maze by each of the four methods.
PART AND WHOLE LEARNING, s.p.a.cED AND UNs.p.a.cED, IN THE PENCIL MAZE (From Pechstein)
s.p.a.ced trials Uns.p.a.ced trials
Whole learning A 641 seconds B 1250 seconds
Part learning C 1220 seconds D 538 seconds
When the trials were s.p.a.ced, the whole method was much the better; but when the trials were bunched, the part method was much the better; and, on the whole, the uns.p.a.ced part learning was the best of all.
Thus the result stands in apparent contradiction with two accepted laws: that of the advantage of s.p.a.ced learning, and that of the advantage of whole learning.
This contradiction warns us not to accept the "laws" {345} too blindly, but rather to a.n.a.lyze out the factors of advantage in each method, and govern ourselves accordingly. Among the factors involved are the following four:
(1) The factor of interest, confidence and visible accomplishment--the emotional factor, we might call it. This is on the side of part learning, especially with beginners, who soon feel out of their depth when wading into a long lesson, and lose hope of ever learning it in this way. This factor is also largely on the side of uns.p.a.ced as against s.p.a.ced learning, when the part studied is of moderate length and when there are recitations to keep up the interest; for when the learner sees he is getting ahead, he would rather keep right on than wait for another day to finish. To have a task that you can hope to accomplish at once, and to attack it with the intention of mastering it at once, is very stimulating.
(2) The factor of recency, of "striking while the iron is hot". When an act has just been successfully performed it can easily be repeated, and when a fact has just been observed it can readily be put to use.
This factor is clearly on the side of uns.p.a.ced learning; and it is also on the side of part learning, since by the time you have gone through the whole long lesson and got back to where you are now, the recency value of what you have just now accomplished will have evaporated.
(3) The factor of meaning, outlining and broad relations.h.i.+ps. This is on the side of whole learning, for it is when you are going through the whole that you catch its general drift, and see the connections of the several parts and their places in the whole. This factor is so important as to outweigh the preceding two in many cases, especially with experienced learners dealing with meaningful material. Even if you should prefer the part method, you would be wise to begin by a careful survey of the whole.
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(4) The factor of permanency. This is something "physiological", and it is on the side of s.p.a.ced learning. The muscles profit more by exercise with intervals of rest than by a large amount of continuous exercise, and no athlete would think for a moment of training for a contest of strength by "cramming" for it. Apparently the neurones obey the same law as the muscles, and for that reason s.p.a.ced learning gives more durable results than uns.p.a.ced.