Your friend Amy has just failed her psychology test and does not understand how this could have happened. She reminds you that she looked over her notes while you were both watching television last night and then stayed up

three more hours cramming in all those "terms" that are so hard to remember by recopying her notes. Amy finally says that "perhaps she studied too much and got confused." After reading about the reflective study strategies, explain how Amy can improve her study habits.
What will be an ideal response

Answer will include that Amy needs to study in a specific place without distractions, such as television. She also needs to space out her study sessions by studying her notes every night and not wait until the night before the test. Cramming, or massed practice, is not an effective study strategy and neither is recopying one's notes.
Mnemonics might help Amy learn the large number of terms by linking new information to ideas and images that she can remember. Amy also needs to self-test herself by posing questions to herself and by using the practice tests and flash cards provided at MindTap. Lastly, Amy should overlearn the material, that is, continue to study and learn after she thinks she has mastered a topic. It would also be helpful to treat every test as if it were an essay test and thoroughly learn the material.

Psychology

You might also like to view...

Events A, B, and C are mutually exclusive and exhaustive. The probability of Event A is .2. The probability of Event B is .3. The probability of Event C is .5. The conditional probability of A given C, P(A|C), is .7.

a. true b. false

Psychology

According to the chapter Flash in the Panabout flashbulb memories, there was a high rate of participant

attrition between the test and the retest. What does thatmean? (a) a large numberof participants dropped out of the study (b) almost all of the participants remained in the study to complete both the test and the retest (c) a large number of participants lost their memories of the events of September 11, 2001 (d) a large number of participants were found to be intentionally misleading the researchers

Psychology