What are the fundamentals of active studying?
Four active processes will be used in the steps of any active study pattern and
any study time that does not involve one or more of these steps is
almost certainly passive and inefficient!
Identifying the important information – answering the
eternal question of “what’s important here?”
Organizing the information – start with the “big
picture” to create a framework that facilitates memorization and access appropriate
for differential diagnosis.
Memorizing the information – this requires frequent
review to keep it available for use!
Applying the information to more complex
situations – practice questions, quiz questions, clinical applications, etc.
Everyone will develop their own
“high volume” study methods eventually, but the majority of medical students
benefit from a starting strategy – and one generally successful starting point
uses five basic steps:
Finding the "big
picture" by
skimming the information before lecture – identifying and memorizing the four
or five major topics will keep you on track during lecture.
Creating a complete rough draft of the material by annotating the
lecturer's slides – notes emphasizing the lecturer's context are
supplemented as needed from other reading materials. Don't rewrite this!
Creating summary charts, lists or diagrams that organize the needed material to emphasize patterns that
facilitate memorization.
Actively memorizing the charts, etc., as they are created,
then incorporating quick and frequent review during later study to nail the
information down – you'll still need the fundamentals after finals are over.
Practicing application using practice or quiz questions during the study process – and not to test yourself just before the exam.
Why find the "big picture" before lecture?
Many students find they lose sight of the forest as they focus on the leaves,
much less the trees. If you notice you are getting lost during lecture, finding
the "big picture" before lecture provides a road map through the
forest that will increase active learning during lecture.
Pre-lecture work should take no
more than 10 minutes/hour lecture and has 2 goals:
The road map. Scan the material to identify the number
of major headings and the major subheadings each has, then take just a couple
of minutes to memorize those (don't skip this part!). Read the introduction and
summary, which emphasize those points.
The vocabulary. Scan the material again to note any
definitions or equations. Exact definitions are crucial and equations help
relate many different factors correctly.
If the lecturer provides a syllabus prior to the lecture –
use it! If not, you can benefit from skimming theassigned reading.
How do I generate my "rough draft" of all this information?
Take lecture notes that emphasize context – the big picture and what the instructor
thinks is important.
Much of the factual information
is typically provided in a syllabus or a handout of a lecturer’s Power Point
slides, so just annotate these – don’t forget you can use the backs of pages
for your notes.
Focus on adding context from
the lecturer – this requires decision-making and so is active.
On a power point graph, note the
“point” a graph or chart is making, or clearly label the axes.
Emphasize any comments of the
lecturer on what is important information vs. what is just “color”.
Always note circumstances that
indicate when one reflex or response will outweigh another!
Number the pages of lecture
notes for each subject so that you can easily identify them. You will need
those specific page numbers for cross-indexing your notes and references from
your summaries.
Use abbreviations and develop
your own shorthand from them. Never write out the entire name of a
macromolecule, gene, etc. after the first time. Use symbols for words
whenever possible and be creative. Keep a list of them for the first quarter or
two and be consistent. As they become habit, your speed will improve a lot.
Create the rough draft by labeling, annotating and
cross-referencing your lecture notes as you read through them the first time – this is the messy but complete document
you’ll use as source material for more concise summaries.
Impose the “big picture” on
your notes.
Add major headings and
subheadings within the notes and in the left margin in a different color ink –
this reinforces the organization of the lecture. The lecture outline will
frequently provide headings if they aren't apparent from the lecture slides.
Label each topic in the left
margin and circle specific definitions within the notes in a different color –
these will be used both for reference and for keying memorization of the
material.
These processes force you to
analyze the material and begin to actually learn it (not just track it); this
will speed up integrative summary design, also.
Supplement your notes with any
additional information from other readings that will be needed to create
effective summaries.
Use your notes about the
lecturer’s emphasis to help decide “what’s important”, and to look for missing
information – if the lecturer discussed three abnormal conditions and provided
causes for only two, maybe you missed the third.
Use the index in the text to
direct you to specific topics – don't get caught up passively reading large
sections without actively pulling out the facts to incorporate into rough
draft.
Cross-index your notes between
lectures – you won't remember which lecture contained each experiment the
weekend before the final.
Each time the lecturer mentions
something you remember being discussed in an earlier lecture, stop, find the
pages in your earlier notes and add the page numbers in both places.
This makes it much easier to
create summaries that contain the from multiple lectures – which are the most
useful summaries!
Your rough draft is the single
reference document you will refer to incase you need to add detail later to
summaries or check on somethingyou originally didn't think was important.
How do I create organized summaries from my rough draft?
Organizing “necessary detail” into integrative summaries facilitates both
memorization and application – and these summaries combine to form the “final
draft” of your information that you will use to study for the final.
What is "necessary"
detail? See FAQ on
"How do I know what will be on the exam?" or “How do I know how much
detail to learn?”
Different material lends itself
to different types of summaries – simple lists, charts, flow diagrams, or
pictures – use whatever combination you prefer.
In each case, organize the
material to emphasize connections and facilitate memorization.
Where possible, create
"big picture" organizations that integrate material from multiple
lectures.
If you're not sure whether to
include a specific detail, leave it out and just put in an asterisk in the
appropriate spot with the page number from your rough draft for quick
reference.
Don't recreate the wheel. If
you find a good chart in some text orother source, photocopy it and add it to
your summaries. Be sure to add any additional information to make it complete
or more comprehensive —try a different color ink to make it stand out.
Create and organize the
headings before you spend any time filling in the actual information.
The headings or location within
a diagram should reinforce the “big picture” or anatomy or chronological
sequence or steps in a physiological process or someaspect of the process.
Finalize the organization of
the headings for your list or chart, or the spatial organization for a flow
chart or diagram before adding in any of the information (this uses up a lot of
scrap paper).
This requires analysis and
integration of the material, which isactive, and aids memorization, since there
is a "reason" for the orderor spatial organization.
Use a hierarchical approach for
headings or spatial organization – no more than five major headings on a list
or chart or six major sections on a diagram — more is too hard to remember.
If you need more headings or
sections, decide how they are related and create subheadings.
The same numerical limits apply
to subheading – if necessary, go to the next level of subheadings.
Make sure your headings
(charts/lists) or spatial organization (flow charts, diagrams) provide
information due to their sequence or location.
Multiple summaries or diagrams
are better than one big one.
Simple outlines in a syllabus
provide a great source for topics that your summaries should cover.
Limit the material covered in a
single summary to an amount reasonable to memorize, then use multiple summaries
to cover the material from different points of view.
For complex material, the
organization of the headings may not be enough to establish the "big
picture"; in these cases, some summaries just focus on the big picture.
Don't hesitate to include the
same information on different summaries,especially if they are organizing the
material from different points ofview or at different levels of detail.
How can I memorize actively and be sure I know the material?
Don't put off memorizing
material until just before the exam.
Of course you will forget much
of it after the first time — that's why you need to build repetitions into your
study pattern. But if you memorized it actively (see above), you forget the
"address" of the information much more than the actual information.
So review will move it into long term memory. If you cram it the night
before, you won't remember it a week later, much less the next quarter or the
next year.
So save the picky (but
necessary) details for the night before, but memorize all the concepts and the
first couple of levels of detail as you go and review them as you study later
material.
Memorize the headings first –
their order should reinforce useful information like anatomy, time course, etc.
First, memorize how many items
(e.g., headings) there are
Second, memorize the headings
themselves – using biological logic, visualization, or mnemonics.
Third, memorize the information
associated with each heading, starting with just a key word or short phrase,
and finally adding the full item.
When you think you have
memorized any piece of the chart, etc.:
Cover the original, and write
out the material on a blank piece of paper (don’t be pretty, but don’t cheat!),
then throw what you have just written away!!!
Look at the original – if you
are confident you got it all – great! If there is any question, don’t compare
with what you should have thrown away – just memorize it again.
This method emphasizes what you
don’t know; comparing the new with the old only confirms what you already knew,
which misleads us into thinking we know more than we do.
Quizzing each other is good
motivation, but beware of subliminal cues used to help answer the questions
without mastering the material. Explaining it out loud to yourself is a good
start, but you can verbally "hand-wave" around areas you aren't clear
on. Always check yourself as above.
Frequent review is relatively
painless with organized material – and extremely helpful.
When an earlier topic or
concept is mentioned, stop and review to yourself the relevant summary list –
start with how many, then the headings, then the key words, then the concepts
or facts.
This review actually decreases
the time needed to master later lectures, since later material builds on
earlier; this also increases exam speed, since answering factual questions will
be easier and faster.
How do I prepare for exam questions?
What are the most common problems medical students have with exams?
Clarity of definitions or
concepts vs. those derived from context.
Students often generate their
own general concepts or definitions from context – after all, that’s how we
learn to speak – but this doesn’t provide enough clarity to analyze and
correctly answer the questions.
Medical terminology and
equations are very precise – being “close enough” often isn’t sufficient.
Familiarity with material vs.
mastery of the material.
“Familiarity” refers to
recognizing the logic provided by someone else – as when leaving a good
lecture, you can say, “yeah, that made sense.”
Mastery of the material
requires integration and memorization of sufficient detail that the information
can be successfully applied to new situation.
Good test questions
discriminate between the two!
Not having enough time to
answer the more difficult applications questions involving multiple steps in
feedback loops or multiple related equations.
You need a method to approach
complex question before you get to the exam.
Use examples given in lecture,
quiz questions, or other practice questions while you are studying to work out
approaches for such questions ahead of time.
Where do I find time for all this?
Successful high-volume studying
relies on good investment strategies:
Finding the “big picture”
before lecture is easily put off, but it usually saves more time during creation of the rough draft.
Creating summaries takes a lot
of time, but it provides the "final draft" from which you study for
the final – you won't have time to go back through the origninal notes!
There is more time available in
a day than you think – use it all.
Divide your studying into a
series of short tasks – don't wait until you have 2 or 3 hours to study. Use
small bits of time while your clothes are drying or while the rice is cooking
for dinner for a single task.
Use all the "extra"
time you can in the early weeks to be caught up in lectures and ahead on papers
so there is some slop when it gets really intense.
Be VERY careful about
"robbing Peter to pay Paul" – it's inevitable, but try to keep it to
a minimum. It’s tempting to completely quit keeping up with other classes to
study for the upcoming exam, but this is a major trap – that class has a final,
too. Usually, skipping class to do a paper or study for an exam ends up costing
significantly more time in make-up time in the missed subject.
source: US SanDiego school of medicine
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