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THE SCIENCE OF R E M E M B E R I N G A LANGUAGE Image by Horla Varlan on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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The Science of Remembering a Language

Apr 21, 2017

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Page 1: The Science of Remembering a Language

THE SCIENCE OF R E M E M B E R I N G

A LANGUAGE

Image by Horla Varlan on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Page 2: The Science of Remembering a Language

This is no secret, it’s just plain science.

Image by Steve Jurveston on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Page 3: The Science of Remembering a Language

This is no secret, it’s just plain science.

(It’s not rocket science, though.)

Image by Steve Jurveston on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Page 5: The Science of Remembering a Language

Just how quickly do we forget?

Data taken from H.F. Spitzer, 1939

Page 6: The Science of Remembering a Language

You can forget more than three quarters of studied material in just

two weeks.

Page 7: The Science of Remembering a Language

But you can fight that forgetfulness.

Image by Taymaz Valley on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Page 8: The Science of Remembering a Language

But you can fight that forgetfulness.

Image by Taymaz Valley on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

All you need to do is review!

Page 9: The Science of Remembering a Language

Repetition and review moves bits and pieces of the language from your short-

term to long-term memory.

Image by Allan Ajifo on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Page 10: The Science of Remembering a Language

This process is called rote memorization.

(It’s great for learning vocabulary!)

Page 11: The Science of Remembering a Language

Before you review your brains out, consider these tips.

Page 12: The Science of Remembering a Language

Review early. One:

Page 13: The Science of Remembering a Language

Remember this graph? Look at how quickly the drop-off begins. It’s best to review what you’ve learned within 1-2 days of

learning it, then periodically after that depending on how well you know the word or phrase.

Page 14: The Science of Remembering a Language

Review often. Two:

Page 15: The Science of Remembering a Language

Reviewing once the day after studying is a good first step. Continue to review words and phrases periodically for

long-term retention.

Page 16: The Science of Remembering a Language

Take breaks! Three:

Page 17: The Science of Remembering a Language

Do not cram! Reviewing for 15-20 minutes every day will boost retention without causing burn out.

Image by John Lambert Pearson on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Page 18: The Science of Remembering a Language

Now that you understand the dangers of not reviewing, you may be asking yourself when, what, and how to review.

Image by John Lambert Pearson on Flickr.com is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Page 19: The Science of Remembering a Language

This is where we can help, thanks to technology!

Page 20: The Science of Remembering a Language

Transparent Language Online observes how many times you get a word right or wrong when learning.

Page 21: The Science of Remembering a Language

The Learned Words and Phrases refresh system uses this data to does 3 things:

Remember which words/phrases you’ve

learned

Keep track of their status in your memory

Create opportunities for

you to review “stale” words/phrases

Page 22: The Science of Remembering a Language

The more you demonstrate that you truly remember a word, the less often you’ll see it. Smarter reviewing, just like that!

Page 23: The Science of Remembering a Language

Don’t forget to remember! Sign up for the free 14-day trial of Transparent Language Online and see just how much you

remember at the end.

START LEARNING