Post: How to memorize anything
10-13-2010, 11:27 AM #1
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); Hey everybody this is not my tutorial but it is quiet good. Enjoy! Happy
In college, I memorized 7 chapters of my psychology textbook — over 23,000 words. Yes, I could actually recite the entire 7 chapters to anyone willing to listen.

Why did I do this? My professor had challenged me with two statements on the first day of class: 1) No student had ever aced his introductory exam; and 2) all the answers could be found in the first 7 chapters of the textbook.

Determined to be the first student to ace his test, I memorized all 7 chapters.

If you’re looking for a way to increase the capacity of your memory or pass a test, you don’t need to memorize 23,000 words. But the technique I used to memorize those chapters can be used to memorize anything. Below is the simpler version of my system, developed to help my pupils pass history, psychology, and other information-heavy tests.

First, use a pencil or word processor (I prefer the latter because it’s faster) to type, in complete sentences, any fact you think might appear on the test. Use short sentences because they’re easier to remember.
Take your printed notes into a quiet room, shut the door, and eliminate all distractions.
Look at the first sentence in your notes and read it out loud. Then, close your eyes and say the sentence without looking at it.
Repeat the step above, this time with the first 2 sentences.
Next, try it with 3 sentences. Then 4. Repeat until you have memorized every sentence in your notes.
After a study session, take a quick nap. New memories are very vulnerable, but studies have shown that sleep helps your new memories stick. After your nap, repeat the memory technique once more for maximum retention.

I eventually became so good at this technique that I could complete all my studying for any information heavy mid-term or final exam in less than 6 hours. Yes, I realize this sounds like a lot of time, but it’s not much time at all – because this technique works from a cold start, even if you haven’t cracked the book all semester.

I’m not saying you should ignore your classes until the last minute (please don’t — I rarely studied at the last minute myself), but it’s good to know there is a way to save yourself if you do.

This technique worked remarkably well; I graduated first in my class (with this being one tool in my toolbelt — not the entire belt).
If your academic goals are more modest than mine, you can get by with less studying and fewer notes. Take breaks whenever fatigue sets in. Eat a snack. Have a glass of water. It helps.

Does it Really Work?

My memory technique isn’t the newest, the prettiest, or the most interesting technique on the market. But it has worked for me, my students, and even my wife, who claims to have the “worst memory in the world.”
Let’s be clear: Memorizing 23,000 words takes a long time, which is one reason why a pure stacking mechanism (as described above) can be greatly improved upon when you’re dealing with numbers that big. But remember, this technique is optimized to help you memorize 5 or 6 pages worth of notes, not 7 entire chapters.

My best advice is to try it for yourself.

When it comes to memorization, it’s important to find a strategy that works for you, whether it’s mine, someone else’s, or your own. What I like about my technique is its simplicity and the quickness with which you can test it on yourself.

By the way, I did become the first person to ever score a 100% on my professor’s introductory exam, just in case you were wondering.
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The following 5 users say thank you to anonymous77 for this useful post:

aNaTuMy-, gola, Legalize It, ToeMold, x852
10-13-2010, 11:30 AM #2
My memory is worse than all 30 people of whom I've tested against not long ago; won't work for me but I'm sure for just about anybody else this is gold Winky Winky
10-13-2010, 11:34 AM #3
gola
OVER 9000!
Originally posted by anonymous77 View Post
Hey everybody this is not my tutorial but it is quiet good. Enjoy! Happy
In college, I memorized 7 chapters of my psychology textbook — over 23,000 words. Yes, I could actually recite the entire 7 chapters to anyone willing to listen.

Why did I do this? My professor had challenged me with two statements on the first day of class: 1) No student had ever aced his introductory exam; and 2) all the answers could be found in the first 7 chapters of the textbook.

Determined to be the first student to ace his test, I memorized all 7 chapters.

If you’re looking for a way to increase the capacity of your memory or pass a test, you don’t need to memorize 23,000 words. But the technique I used to memorize those chapters can be used to memorize anything. Below is the simpler version of my system, developed to help my pupils pass history, psychology, and other information-heavy tests.

First, use a pencil or word processor (I prefer the latter because it’s faster) to type, in complete sentences, any fact you think might appear on the test. Use short sentences because they’re easier to remember.
Take your printed notes into a quiet room, shut the door, and eliminate all distractions.
Look at the first sentence in your notes and read it out loud. Then, close your eyes and say the sentence without looking at it.
Repeat the step above, this time with the first 2 sentences.
Next, try it with 3 sentences. Then 4. Repeat until you have memorized every sentence in your notes.
After a study session, take a quick nap. New memories are very vulnerable, but studies have shown that sleep helps your new memories stick. After your nap, repeat the memory technique once more for maximum retention.

I eventually became so good at this technique that I could complete all my studying for any information heavy mid-term or final exam in less than 6 hours. Yes, I realize this sounds like a lot of time, but it’s not much time at all – because this technique works from a cold start, even if you haven’t cracked the book all semester.

I’m not saying you should ignore your classes until the last minute (please don’t — I rarely studied at the last minute myself), but it’s good to know there is a way to save yourself if you do.

This technique worked remarkably well; I graduated first in my class (with this being one tool in my toolbelt — not the entire belt).
If your academic goals are more modest than mine, you can get by with less studying and fewer notes. Take breaks whenever fatigue sets in. Eat a snack. Have a glass of water. It helps.

Does it Really Work?

My memory technique isn’t the newest, the prettiest, or the most interesting technique on the market. But it has worked for me, my students, and even my wife, who claims to have the “worst memory in the world.”
Let’s be clear: Memorizing 23,000 words takes a long time, which is one reason why a pure stacking mechanism (as described above) can be greatly improved upon when you’re dealing with numbers that big. But remember, this technique is optimized to help you memorize 5 or 6 pages worth of notes, not 7 entire chapters.

My best advice is to try it for yourself.

When it comes to memorization, it’s important to find a strategy that works for you, whether it’s mine, someone else’s, or your own. What I like about my technique is its simplicity and the quickness with which you can test it on yourself.

By the way, I did become the first person to ever score a 100% on my professor’s introductory exam, just in case you were wondering.

Only thread I have ever bookmarked off of ngu, good read and I'll be sure to try this, mind you I literally have one of the worst memories in the world, in my opinion atleast. :FU: :FU: :FU:
10-13-2010, 11:36 AM #4
My memory isn't bad but I've tried things like this before but never really put much effort into it but I may start using it again.
10-13-2010, 11:36 AM #5
ZoneHD
Shiver do you lift?
I cant even remember my mobile number never mine 23,000+ words.
10-13-2010, 11:37 AM #6
IF I sleep after I memorize something I forget when I wake up and have to learn all over again. Yeah, my memory is that bad. :/
10-13-2010, 11:37 AM #7
Legalize It
steeezynutz
i did this to remember prayers in grade school(private school). I've never thought of trying to memorize a chapter or something like this. I almost failed biology this quarter so i think I'll give this a try.
10-13-2010, 11:38 AM #8
gola
OVER 9000!
Originally posted by Spartin560 View Post
I cant even remember my mobile number never mine 23,000+ words.


He never said he remembered the 23.000, you just remember the important stuff and it makes sense, like you get all the key words/sentences and the rest makes no difference really...
10-13-2010, 01:03 PM #9
ShinigamiUzi
Proud to be a Player
i cant rember anything but i remeber the date of each platinum trophy that i earned them Happy
10-13-2010, 01:46 PM #10
ToeMold
Wait...what?
Originally posted by anonymous77 View Post
Hey everybody this is not my tutorial but it is quiet good. Enjoy! Happy
In college, I memorized 7 chapters of my psychology textbook — over 23,000 words. Yes, I could actually recite the entire 7 chapters to anyone willing to listen.

Why did I do this? My professor had challenged me with two statements on the first day of class: 1) No student had ever aced his introductory exam; and 2) all the answers could be found in the first 7 chapters of the textbook.

Determined to be the first student to ace his test, I memorized all 7 chapters.

If you’re looking for a way to increase the capacity of your memory or pass a test, you don’t need to memorize 23,000 words. But the technique I used to memorize those chapters can be used to memorize anything. Below is the simpler version of my system, developed to help my pupils pass history, psychology, and other information-heavy tests.

First, use a pencil or word processor (I prefer the latter because it’s faster) to type, in complete sentences, any fact you think might appear on the test. Use short sentences because they’re easier to remember.
Take your printed notes into a quiet room, shut the door, and eliminate all distractions.
Look at the first sentence in your notes and read it out loud. Then, close your eyes and say the sentence without looking at it.
Repeat the step above, this time with the first 2 sentences.
Next, try it with 3 sentences. Then 4. Repeat until you have memorized every sentence in your notes.
After a study session, take a quick nap. New memories are very vulnerable, but studies have shown that sleep helps your new memories stick. After your nap, repeat the memory technique once more for maximum retention.

I eventually became so good at this technique that I could complete all my studying for any information heavy mid-term or final exam in less than 6 hours. Yes, I realize this sounds like a lot of time, but it’s not much time at all – because this technique works from a cold start, even if you haven’t cracked the book all semester.

I’m not saying you should ignore your classes until the last minute (please don’t — I rarely studied at the last minute myself), but it’s good to know there is a way to save yourself if you do.

This technique worked remarkably well; I graduated first in my class (with this being one tool in my toolbelt — not the entire belt).
If your academic goals are more modest than mine, you can get by with less studying and fewer notes. Take breaks whenever fatigue sets in. Eat a snack. Have a glass of water. It helps.

Does it Really Work?

My memory technique isn’t the newest, the prettiest, or the most interesting technique on the market. But it has worked for me, my students, and even my wife, who claims to have the “worst memory in the world.”
Let’s be clear: Memorizing 23,000 words takes a long time, which is one reason why a pure stacking mechanism (as described above) can be greatly improved upon when you’re dealing with numbers that big. But remember, this technique is optimized to help you memorize 5 or 6 pages worth of notes, not 7 entire chapters.

My best advice is to try it for yourself.

When it comes to memorization, it’s important to find a strategy that works for you, whether it’s mine, someone else’s, or your own. What I like about my technique is its simplicity and the quickness with which you can test it on yourself.

By the way, I did become the first person to ever score a 100% on my professor’s introductory exam, just in case you were wondering.


I just wanted to post and say thank you for this information.

At the moment I am taking my A-Levels (I'm not sure if the US have them) and I need to retain a lot of information.

Could I just ask out of curiosity, how many times did you have to recite the notes you made to be able to recite those seven chapters?

+Rep, Thanks and Nomination due to the fact that this information is very helpful to myself.

Thanks man,

/AC

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