Basic Principles about Review
A. Before you attempt to learn new material in class or through reading: • Glance over previous chapters or notes. • Run through your mind what you know already. Since memorization of new material is most effective when it is associated with the material already known, this process brings all available mental "hooks" to the surface.
B. Immediately after learning: • Rework your notes, adding material that comes to mind. (Don't recopy; this is wasteful.) • Order and organize what was learned. (Star, use arrows, additional comments, etc.) • Integrate new material with what you already know.
Forgetting is most rapid right after learning. Review helps combat this. Relearning is easier if it is done quickly. Don't wait until it's all gone.
• original learning • immediate review of limited material same day (5-10 minutes) • intermediate review of material covered so far, after 2 months • final review, before exam Intermediate and final reviews should stress understanding and organization of material.
• Be brief. Review entire semester's work in 2-4 hours. (Set a limit and stick to it.) • Outline and organize from memory. Don't bother copying. • Recite (in writing or out loud to a friend or self)