St Mary's Primary School Crookwell
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Wade St
Crookwell NSW 2583
Subscribe: https://stmarysc.nsw.edu.au/subscribe

Email: office.stmarysc@cg.catholic.edu.au
Phone: 02 4832 1592

Classroom Support with Mrs. Spackman

Developing short-term memory skills

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Intention

  • Students need to have a reason to remember
  • Establish an expectation to remember

Support

  • Give student time if struggling
  • Provide scaffolding/cues eg. visual
  • Divide learning task into small, achievable steps
  • Teach each step explicitly
  • Make sure one step is learned before moving on to the next

Teach memory strategies

  • Rehearsal/repetition; simple recitation is useful for learning facts, eg, multiplication tables, lists; items at the beginning of a list are most likely to be recalled, so have several short lists rather than one long one.
  • Relate information to a theme or make up a story incorporating the information
  • Chunk information to make it easier to remember it all
  • Group information into sub-units, eg the phone number 82164532 (8 bits) might be reduced to small parts to remember; the word ending "e d" (2 bits) is best reduced to "ed" (1 bit)
  • Mental visualisation; create a mental picture of the content to be remembered, eg, details of a story, a process, directions. Close your eyes. Can you see it inside your eyes? For some students this may be difficult and require guided practice.
  • Mnemonics
    • Talk about the memory tricks you use, eg, to remember the spelling of stationary/stationery: cars are stationary, stationery paper
    • Make up a sentence using the letters of a word, eg, "because" - Big Elephants Can Always Understand Small Elephants
    • Make up a sentence with the order of the points of the compass - Never Eat Soggy Weet-bix
    • Rhymes, eg, Thirty Days have September, April June and November

Practice

  • Students with memory difficulties may know something one day and have forgotten it the next
  • Provide many opportunities for practice - consider also the value of computer programs with their immediate feedback, infinite patience, and potential for variety
  • Review previous learning regularly, eg, spellings, maths concepts, routines

Memory aids

  • Encourage the use of the following tools:
    • Diaries
    • Illustrations
    • Charts
    • Calendars
    • Graphs
    • Cue cards
    • Concept maps
    • Notes
    • Flash cards
    • Summaries
    • Post-it stickers with reminders
    • Copies of daily/weekly timetables
    • Checklists of tasks to complete
    • Calculators
    • Multiplication tables
    • Cards with correct letter formation
    • Indexed book with frequently mis-spelt words
    • Business cards with address, important telephone numbers, etc
    • Graphic organisers

Ask student: how are you going to remember this information?

Model strategies they might use, relate it to their own experiences