Saturday, May 25, 2013

Mermise - What Would You Like To Learn?

Old dogs, then, are much more adaptable than folklore would have it – and if we do have deficits, they aren't insurmountable. The reason that children appear to be better learners may have more to do with their environment, and factors such as physical fitness.

Indeed, many researchers believe that an adult's lifestyle may be the biggest obstacle. "A child's sole occupation is learning to speak and move around," says Ed Cooke, a cognitive scientist who has won many memory contests. "If an adult had that kind of time to spend on attentive learning, I'd be very disappointed if they didn't do a good job."


A glut of free time and a carefree existence are out of reach for most of us, but there are other behaviours that boost children's learning, and these habits can be easily integrated into even an adult's schedule. For example, children are continually quizzed on what they know – and for good reason: countless studies have shown that testing doubles long-term recall, outperforming all other memory tactics. Yet most adults attempting to learn new skills will rely more on self-testing which, let's be honest, happens less often.

That's why Cooke developed a website, called Memrise, which helps take some of the pain out of testing and, crucially, can integrate learning into the adult day. It is designed to track your learning curve with cunningly timed tests that force you to retrieve the information just as you are about to forget it.

"Memrise engages your brain to the greatest possible extent," says Cooke, who has himself used the site to learn thousands of words of foreign vocabulary. Users can create their own courses – the topics range from art to zoology – and importantly, it is easy to load the site in the few spare minutes of your lunch break or while you are waiting for a train. Cooke also plans to launch a smartphone app.


- You never stop learning like a child

Check out Memrise to learn things outside the realm of STEM and yes, there is more to life than STEM.


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