Magical Memory Tour The Unending Quest for a Study Formula That Works by PATRICIA WESTFALL Thought, not memorization, is the soul of learning. Every professor says this. What teacher would claim not to be teaching students to think? But just try and pass a test by thinking. Every student who has forgotten the year Thomas Aquinas died knows that thinking ability is not what gets tested. Memorization— dictaphone style—is the ability in question. Thinking won’t derive the seven phyla or reveal the eighth wonder of the world. Only memori zation counts in the crunch, and stu dents who wish to survive had better master the skill. But how? “Perhaps the most basic thing that can be said about human memory, after a century of research, is that unless detail is placed in a structural pattern it is rapidly forgotten,” said Jerome Bruner in Process of Educa tion in 1960. Bruner’s concept, the importance of structure, lies in one form or another at the root of all how to-study methods. In the Beginning ... Was SQ3R The first and most famous of the foolproof, try-it-you-can’t-fail study formulas was Frank Robinson’s SQ3R method published in 1946. The acro nym stands for “Survey, Question, Read, Recite, Review.” The method, still taught today in a great many college how-to-study courses, works this way. First, survey the structure of the chapter, reading paragraph head ings and summaries; this helps your i mind get a firm grasp of the whole assignment before you read. nJT ^ •• w m |y MBEi 1 Sri A Mm \Ur^m r , *'r 1. { ffWSM MMwm?w§£ t i y I ,1 ..uihJBi 1 W' l/f/, ,.y V> /l/ •' * ■' ' ‘ ' #1 Next, turn those paragraph head ings into questions which must be answered by the text. Then read (the first R) to find those answers. Robin son stresses that reading must be an active process; you should be search es for answers, not just passing your ;yes over the type. Every so often (every other page, in act) you should stop, close the book and try to recite what you have just ead. This is the step that is supposed o fix the information in your mem ary. Finally, after you have read and recited the complete assignment, take a few minutes to review what you’ve just learned before calling it a night. The Confession Robinson’s sure-fire thoroughly tested formula was preached pas sionately by academic counselors until the student population boom of the 1960’s. That’s when new how-to study formulas began to pop into print at a rate second only to sex manuals—and volumes ahead of diet books. Most of these were variations on SQ3R.