Some sample stories from the news column Life's Outtakes

Here are some sample news columns by Daris Howard. See more at http://www.darishoward.com/searchcolumnstories.php

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Efficiency In Learning

Efficiency In Learning
By
Daris Howard
copyright 2006
all rights reserved
Any commercial use of this article is strictly prohibited, but noncommercial sharing on the Internet is allowed.


     Every year I give my new students a lecture about learning. I tell them I will try to give them only the homework necessary for them to understand the concepts, and not so much that it just becomes busy work. That way they can still have some sort of social life. In addition, I share a few ideas that may help them to study. I will therefore address this column to all students and others interested in learning.
     As a student, I paid my own way through college. I always worked one or two part time jobs, and, to save money, I crammed as many as 21 and a half credits into a semester. The half credit was varsity wrestling, which required 4 hours of training per day. A normal load is 12 to 16 credits, therefore, between work and lots of classes, I had to learn to study efficiently.
     Math, the subject I teach, is often many students' nemesis. Students tend to procrastinate taking these courses as long as possible and then tend to put off doing the homework once they are in the class. This results in even more frustration. I tell the students they need to take courses they dislike first and similar ones as close together as possible. This will help them remember what they have already learned. In addition, there are things they can do to better understand the material and complete their homework more efficiently.
     Each of us has probably taken a class where we sit through the lecture and we understand what is being taught. Then time passes and, when we finally sit down to do our homework, we realize that we are clueless about it and can't even figure out our own notes. Some students wonder, at that point, if they ever truly did understand it.
     The problem is not actually one of understanding. We learn from psychology that there are two levels of memory: long term and short term. As a former computer science teacher, I often describe this as R.A.M. and hard drive. When a person first learns something, it is in short-term memory (R.A.M.). A person's short-term memory can only hold a certain amount. This means that, as time goes on, it is replaced by other information and it will be as if they never even attended that class. In order to lock in what they learned into long-term memory (hard drive) a person needs to practice it immediately.
     I suggest to my students that, if they have a class they struggle in, they need to block out an hour immediately after the class to do the homework. This will help them to process the information to their long-term memory while they still understand it. By doing this, they will learn better, deeper, faster, and more efficiently. I have found, in my own studies, that, by following this advice, I could cut my homework time to about a third of what it took before.
     I have now done my part to give you a social life. The rest is up to you. Of course, I realize that no matter what I do, some of you won't have a social life, but you can't say I didn't try.

About Me

St. Anthony, Idaho, United States
Daris Howard is an author and playwright who grew up on an Idaho farm. Throughout his life he has associated with many colorful characters including cowboys, farmers, lumberjacks, truck drivers, factory workers, and others while working in these and other industries. He was a state champion and collegiate wrestler and lived for eighteen months in New York, and is currently a math professor. Daris and his wife, Donna, have ten children and were foster parents for several years. He has also worked in scouting and cub scouts, at one time having 18 boys in his scout troop. Besides his plays and books he also writes a popular weekly newspaper column called "Life's Outtakes" that are short stories from his life and the lives of those he has known. His writings, including many of his humorous and inspirational short stories can be found at http://www.darishoward.com He has had plays translated into German and French and performed in many countries around the world. He has won many awards including the National Theatre Co-op Award, the Deseret Dramatic Award, semifinalist in the Moondance Film and Theatre Festival, and his book, The Three Gifts, has won the Editor's Choice Award.