Psychology of Study!..
In our investigation of the psychology of study we have so far directed our attention chiefly toward the subjective side of the question, seeking to discover the contents of mind during study. We shall now take an objective view of study, examining not the contents of mind nor methods of study, but the objective results of study.In doing this, we choose certain units of measurement, the number of minutes required for learning a given amount or the amount learned in a stated period of time. We may do this for the learning of any material, whether it be Greek verbs or typewriting. All that is necessary is to decide upon some method by which progress can be noted and expressed in numerical units.
This, you will observe, constitutes a statistical approach to the processes of study, such as is employed in science; and just as the statistical method has been useful in science, so it may be of value in education, and by means of statistical investigations of learning we may hope to discover some of the factors operative in good learning.
Progress in learning is best observable when we represent our
measurements graphically, when they take the form of a curve,
variously called "the curve of efficiency," "practice curve,"
"learning curve." We shall take a sample curve for the basis of
our discussion, showing the progress of a beginner in the
Russian language for sixty-five days (indicated in the figure by
horizontal divisions).
The student studied industriously for
thirty minutes each day and then translated as rapidly as
possible for fifteen minutes, the number of words translated
being represented by the vertical spaces on the chart. Thus, on
the tenth day, twenty-five words were translated, on the
twentieth day, forty-five words.
In making an analysis of this typical curve, we note immediately an exceeding irregularity. At one time there is extraordinary improvement, but a later measurement registers pronounced loss. This irregularity is very common in learning. Some days we do a great amount of work and do it well, but perhaps the very next day shows marked diminution in our work.
The second characteristic we note is that there is extremely
rapid progress at the beginning, the curve slanting up quite
sharply. This is common in learning, and may be accounted for in
several ways.
In the first place, the easiest things come first.
For example, when you are beginning the study of German, you are
given mostly monosyllabic words to learn. These are easily
remembered, hence progress is rapid. A second reason is that at
the beginning there are many different respects in which
progress can be made.
For example, the beginner in German must
learn nouns, case endings, declension of adjectives, days of the
week; in short, a vast number of new things all at once. At a
later period however, the number of new things to be learned is
much smaller and improvement cannot be so rapid. A third reason
why learning proceeds more rapidly at first is that the interest
is greater at this time.
You have doubtless many times
experienced this fact, and you know that when a thing has the
interest of novelty you work harder upon it.
If you will examine the learning curve closely, you will note
that after the initial spurt, there is a slowing up. The curve
at this point resembles a plateau and indicates cessation of
progress if not retrogression.
This period of no progress is
regarded as a characteristic of the learning curve and is a time
of great discouragement to the conscientious student, so
distressing that we may designate it "the plateau of despond."
Most people describe it as a time when they feel unable to learn
more about a subject; the mind seems to be sated; new ideas
cannot be assimilated, and old ones seem to be forgotten.
The
plateau may extend for a long or a short time, depending upon
the nature of the subject-matter and the length of time over
which the learning extends. In the case of professional
training, it may extend over a year or more. In the case of
growing children in school, it sometimes happens that an entire
year elapses during which the learning of an apparently bright
student is retarded.
In a course of study in high school or
college, it may come on about the third week and extend a month
or more. Something akin to the plateau may come in the course of
a day, when we realize that our efficiency is greatly diminished
and we seem, for an hour or more, to make no progress.
Inasmuch as the plateau is such a common occurrence in human
activity, we should analyze it and see what factors operate to
influence it. It is interesting to note that the plateau
generally occurs just before an abrupt rise in efficiency.
This
is significant, for it may mean that the plateau is necessary in
learning, especially just before reaching the really advanced
stages of proficiency. Accordingly, when you are experiencing a
plateau in the mastery of some accomplishment, you may perhaps
derive some comfort from the prospect of an approaching rise in
efficiency.
On the theory that it is a necessary part of
learning, it has been regarded as a resting place. We are so
constituted by nature that we cannot run on indefinitely; nature
sometimes must call a halt.
Consequently, the plateau may be a
warning that we cannot learn more for the present and that the
proper remedy is to refrain for a little while from further
efforts in that line.
We have possible justification for this
interpretation when we reflect that a vacation does us much
good, and though we begin it feeling stale, we end it feeling
much fresher and more efficient.
But to stop work temporarily is not the only way to meet a plateau, and fatigue or ennui is probably not the sole or most compelling explanation. It may be that we should not regard the objective results as the true measure of learning; perhaps learning is going on even though the results are not apparent. We discovered something in the nature of unconscious learning in our discussion of memory, and it may be that a period of little objective progress marks a period of active unconscious learning.
Another meaning which the plateau may have is simply to mark
places of greater difficulty. As already remarked, the early
period is a stage of comparative ease, but as the work becomes
more difficult, progress is slower.
It is also quite likely that
the plateau may indicate that some of the factors operative at
the start are operative no longer. Thus, although the learning
was rapid at the beginning because the material learned at that
time was easy, the plateau may come because the things to be
learned have become difficult. Or, whereas the beginning was
attacked with considerable interest, the plateau may mean that
the interest is dying down, and that less effort is being
exerted.
If these theories are the true explanation of the plateau, we
see that it is not to be regarded as a time of reduction in
learning, to be contemplated with despair. The appropriate
attitude may be one of resignation, with the determination to
make it as slightly disturbing as possible.
But though the
reasons just described may have something to do with the
production of the plateau, as yet we have no evidence that the
plateau cannot be dispensed with. It is practically certain that
the plateau is not caused entirely by necessity for rest or
unconscious learning. It frequently is due, we must regretfully
admit, to poor early preparation. If at the beginning of a
period of learning an insecure foundation is laid, it cannot be
expected to support the burden of more difficult subject-matter.
We have enumerated a number of the explanations that have been
advanced to account for the plateau, and have seen that it may
have several causes, among which are necessity for rest,
increased difficulty of subject-matter, loss of interest and
insufficient preparation.
In trying to eliminate the plateau,
our remedy should be adapted to the cause. In recognition of the
fact that learning proceeds irregularly, we see that it is
rational to expect the amount of effort to be exerted throughout
a period of learning, to vary. It will vary partly with the
difficulty of subject-matter and partly with fluctuations in
bodily and mental efficiency which are bound to occur from day
to day. Since this irregularity is bound to occur, you may well
make your effort vary from one extreme to the other. At times,
perhaps your most profitable move may be to take a complete
vacation.
The vacation might cover several weeks, a week-end, or
if the plateau is merely a low period in the day's work, then
ten minutes may suffice for a vacation. As an adjunct to such
rest periods, some form of recreation should usually be planned,
for the essential thing is to permit the mind to rest from the
tiresome activity.
If your plateau represents greater difficulty of subject-matter
and loss of interest, your duty is plainly to work harder. In
exerting more effort, make some changes in your methods of
study.
For example, if you have been accustomed to study a
certain subject by silent reading, begin to read your lessons
aloud. Change your method of taking notes, or change the hour of
day in which you prepare your lesson. In short, try any of the
methods described in this book, and use your own ingenuity, and
the change in method may overcome the plateau.
If a plateau is due to our last-mentioned cause, insufficient
preparation, the remedy must be drastic. To make new resolutions
and to put forth additional effort is not enough; you must go
back and relay the foundation. Make a thorough review of the
work which you covered slightingly, making sure that every step
is clear.
This process was described in an earlier chapter as
the clarification of ideas and is absolutely essential in
building up a structure of knowledge that will stand. Indeed, as
you take various courses you will find that your study will be
much improved by periodical reviews. The benefits cannot all be
enumerated here, but we may reasonably claim that a review will
be very likely to remove a plateau, and used with the other
remedies herein suggested, will help you to rid yourself of one
of the most discouraging features of student life.
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