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Study Tip #17
USING MENTAL FRAMEWORKS TO LEARN MORE
Introduction and examples of frameworks
Educational researchers have found
a powerful technique students can use to understand and remember more:
Plug new ideas into familiar frameworks. As you read the following
examples, notice how the use of organizing frameworks helped people learn
more easily.
. Researchers improved U.S. history textbooks for middle school children
by teaching them "big ideas". For example, they taught them that
human problems in history led to solutions and the solutions in turn led
to more effects. Children studying with this familiar big idea in
mind both understood history better and remembered more.
. Researchers studying ways to present material in textbooks discovered
that when they organized information graphically in charts, people learned
better than when they presented information in ordinary outlines.
Students found there was something about seeing concepts and ideas neatly
according to their place in a framework and displayed in rows and columns
that improved learning. Students who organize notes in charts learn
better, too.
. Researchers studying memory have discovered that when people have
to learn lists of related terms, like the names of rocks and minerals in
geology, they can remember more if they see the contents in organized charts
than in lists or unorganized charts.
. Researchers have discovered that if they tell the story of a baseball
game to people who already understand baseball rules and how typical games
go (a framework), such people have a good memory for the stories.
In contrast, people who don't know baseball somehow cannot remember as
much of the stories. This advantage occurs on most topics on which
people already have a body of knowledge. The more we know, the more
rapidly we learn.
. The writers of a difficult chapter in a biology text had to solve
the problem of describing 19 parts of cells clearly. They solved
it 3 ways: They made a table and grouped the summary information under
the headings of structure (the 19 parts), the parts' functions (what they
did), and the parts' composition (what they were made of). They also
drew diagrams labelling the parts in the cells. And they linked the
parts as they wrote the descriptions by describing the flow of stuff that
the cells made and how the flow goes from part to part. The resulting
frameworks helped readers bring order out of complex and very unfamiliar
material.
. Yet certain frameworks are bad for learning! Researchers have
discovered that when teachers and writers tell interesting stories and
odd but irrelevant facts, unfortunately students' learning drops.
And when the irrelevant facts are told at the beginning of a lecture, the
damage is worse. Why? Because students use these irrelevant frameworks
to organize the material around.
Each of these methods involves building frameworks that give general
summaries that help the reader understand different kinds of specific information.
Each framework has parts that are linked together. When we learn
new facts, we will fit them somewhere in the frame. We do not have
to learn thousands of facts as unrelated items, but can associate each
new fact to its classification within the frame.
Formal Definition: A framework is a general body of knowledge
about a topic. It contains attributes of the topic, and attributes
can vary from case to case. For example, people's knowledge of baseball
rules contains general knowledge of how events can vary in games.
Tips on using frameworks in reading.
Caution: The following ideas are much more useful for learning
theories, facts, information, rules -- non-fiction. They are less
useful for learning and understanding poetry, music, fiction, and art.
Yet there are applications.
. When you read difficult new material for the very first time, you
don't need to think about frames unless it is very easy to do. You
will often find it best just to read for ordinary understanding the first
time. But on your second reading, then you should link new information
to parts of frameworks.
. Do search for frameworks. You will often find them in headlines,
section headings, summaries, charts, diagrams, flow charts, general principles.
You will also see them in introductions or in the topic sentences of paragraphs.
Look for them in analogies, similes and metaphors.
. When you study information, study the bits of information in pairs:
(1) a specific fact or concept and (2) what part of a framework it fits.
. Study in little cycles: You look at the book, then you stop and look
inward and link an idea to a place in a framework. Read and link,
read and link. Stop after finding new facts or concepts and think
which part of the framework the new information fits into. Link facts
to categories in frameworks one by one. Doing this will require
you to practice changing your normal behavior because most of us just read
steadily without stopping to think. Change! It's important!
. Link important concepts and ideas with several frameworks, because
when we associate new material to several things our memory improves.
. Use visual and spatial frameworks to organize new information.
Make mental pictures of ideas. Research shows that linking information
to visual frameworks is very powerful; it usually beats learning in words.
Try to see the new information.
. Combine both visual and verbal information in the same framework.
Charts and graphs do that. When the authors give charts which arrange
ideas in rows and columns to see, use them carefully. When you have
no charts available, make your own charts and diagrams that show relationships.
. Use your body movements as a framework. When you read about
doing procedures, you can imagine moving your hands or legs. Movements
make good frameworks.
. When you recall a personal experience similar to new knowledge, use
your experience as a framework and interpret the new ideas in terms of
it.
. Use the parts of frameworks as a source for questions to test yourself
with. You may already be aware that asking and answering questions
about the material is a very powerful way to study. You can make
it even more powerful by picking the parts of a framework as the question
and using as answers the specific information you are learning or vice
versa.
Handling the problem of learning both the framework and new information
at the same time.
When you already know a framework,
learning is easy. But suppose you have the harder task of learning
both new information and new frameworks at the same time. How do
you do it?
When everything is new to you,
set as your goal to create rapidly both a core of familiar frameworks
and a core of well-learned facts. These two cores will not
cover everything in the material.
Try these tricks:
. Ask your teacher to identify the "big ideas".
. Put your most intense studying efforts into the first few days of
these difficult units. It will pay off later in more relaxed studying.
. Learn the vocabulary and basic facts very fully. Review repeatedly,
use flash cards, test yourself, and practice so that you have a solid core.
. As you identify assumptions, basic patterns and principles, and organizing
ideas, write them down and practice them. These are mini-frameworks.
. Then link new facts to the new frameworks.
Handling the problem of missing frameworks: Five useful frameworks:
Sometimes you won't be able to
find good frameworks in the books or articles you read. When that
happens, you can use these commonsense frameworks. They apply to many topics.
. Time: Before and after. Organize things you read about
in series by what comes first, second, third. As you become conscious
of time order, your memory will go up.
. Cause-and-effect. Many things cause or influence other
things to happen. To say "cause" does not mean that something is
the only cause of another event, just that it affects or influences the
second thing. For example, you might read a sociology article that
links the high cost of housing (cause) to a high rate of homelessness (effect).
Or in the children's story The Three Little Pigs, the foolish pigs choose
to build their house of straw (cause) which later allows the wolf to blow
their house down (effect). If you use your mind to classify events
as causes and effects, your memory and understanding will rise.
. Good and bad. Often authors place value judgments on
material and organize it into good and bad effects, pros and cons, costs
(bad) and benefits (good). This is widespread in college work.
Place things into the good/bad framework and your memory will improve.
. Means and goals. When you are learning how to do procedures
(work in labs, solving problems), you will learn steps that achieve subgoals,
which lead to larger goals, which lead to larger goals. Let your
mind notice and classify this material into means and goals.
. Concept hierarchies. Do you remember seeing a biological
classification of species and genuses and families and so on? That's
a concept hierarchy. Some concepts are general and include many subordinate
concepts; and many concepts are on the same level of generality.
When you read material that includes concepts, put them into concept hierarchies
and you will improve your memory. Draw charts of concepts.
Summary: These are not the only common sense frameworks you can
use. You can think of many more. But you will find them useful
in bringing order out of the chaos of lectures and textbooks.
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