| Literature DB >> 30618964 |
Jari Metsämuuronen1, Pekka Räsänen2.
Abstract
Effective teachers use mnemonic tools or mnemonic triggers to improve the students' retention of the study material. This article discusses mnemonic triggers from a theoretical viewpoint based on Jerome S. Bruner's writings. Fifty small linguistic-cognitive, constructive-, rhetorical-, and phonological-mnemonic triggers are detected. These triggers may become supporting elements for our memory system when we are "constructing the realities" in a Brunerian sense when we are ordering, differentiating, comparing, and handling information, stories and experiences in our mind. Many of these are small, hidden linguistic elements in speech. This article discusses their usage in the educational talk and textbooks.Entities:
Keywords: Jerome Bruner; cognitive psychology; constructivist learning theories; educational psychology; mnemonic triggers; mnemonics; teaching
Year: 2018 PMID: 30618964 PMCID: PMC6299018 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Examples of mnemonic triggers based on Bruner’s ideas.
| Cognitive–linguistic mnemonic triggers | Doubles (“and,” “or”) (“X |
| Strict comparison (“compare” or “the same way”) (“in the same way, X | |
| Strict comparative (“better than”) (“X is | |
| Strict differentiation (“differentiate” or “separate”) (“ | |
| Expression for opposite (“but”) (“X is [like] A | |
| Nominal counterparts (“body – cloth,” “receive – give”) | |
| Extreme counterparts (“good – bad,” “sheep – wolf”) | |
| Nominal ordering (“big – small”) | |
| Comparative ordering (“bigger – smaller”) | |
| Superlative ordering (“biggest – smallest”) | |
| Extreme values (“all,” “always,” “never,” “in the end” or “finally”) | |
| Strict constructivist mnemonic triggers | Spiral teaching (enlarging the material in different rounds) |
| Connecting teaching to something already known (“as you know…”) | |
| Connecting teaching to common concepts (e.g., ingredients, traditions) | |
| Structural repetition (repeating word or idea within the teaching) | |
| Repetition of the material (teaching the same matter again) | |
| Repeated testing of the learnt material | |
| Narrative–constructivist mnemonic triggers | Metaphors (“X |
| Simile (“X is | |
| Visual image | |
| Plotted story | |
| Narrative/parable/allegory | |
| Triple repetitions (“three paths to go”) | |
| Gradual increase or decrease (“1 – 2 – 3”, “3 – 2 – 1”) | |
| Logical–scientific constructivist mnemonic triggers (including | Light argument (“because” or “for”) (“X is Y |
| Conclusion (“then,” “thus,” “hence,” “so,” “therefore”) (“ | |
| Condition (“if,” “unless”) (“ | |
| Reference to hard-fact data | |
| Logical argument (deductive, inductive, abductive, and statistical arguments) | |
| Logical order (in teaching and in the material) | |
| Rhetoric–constructivist mnemonic triggers ( | Raising the value or dignity (of the teacher or the study material) |
| Showing emotions | |
| Evoking positive emotions | |
| Evoking negative emotions | |
| Humor (incl. anecdotes, jokes, puns, satire) | |
| Hyperbole | |
| Activating the audience (“see!,” “listen!,” “be aware!”) | |
| Rhetorical question (“isn’t it so?”) | |
| Direct address to the audience (“you!”) | |
| Collective address to the audience (“you all!”) | |
| Playing with words | |
| Aphorisms and proverbs | |
| Attaching more weight to an important matter (“mark my words!”; “remark!”) | |
| Attaching more weight to a saying (“surely, I say”) | |
| Paradoxical idea | |
| Idea beyond a common sense | |
| Peculiar ideas | |
| Phonological mnemonic triggers | Rhymes |
| Rhythms | |
| Singing | |