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Spaced Learning - Keeping it Fresh, Again

One of the hallmarks of the A Beka curriculum is its spiral method of learning. In this method, students are introduced to topics that continually build upon one another and then “circle” around to earlier concepts in more depth. This method works with a concept called spaced learning. This concept uses science to maximize the amount of time between concepts and skills so that they become ingrained in the mind better.

When we practice spaced learning, we are using our mind’s ability to remember and forget to a greater potential. Most of us remember trying to cram as much information in our heads the night before a quiz, hoping it would stick. If we did remember it during the quiz, we quickly forgot it afterwards. Why? We only tried to access it right there. After that, it didn’t really have any value so our brain pulled the plug and we moved on.

With spaced learning, we use time as an ally. Our memory goes through the “forgetting curve”, an exponential reduction in the knowledge we have learned as we get farther away from learning something. Within an hour of learning a new concept or skill, we forget up to 50% of it. Within seven days, if we don’t revisit it, we will have forgotten most of what we have learned. When we use spaced learning, we have set intervals where we come back and revisit that knowledge. This is what happens in our classrooms every day. Teachers and students review and build on the prior day’s knowledge in a specific timeframe to ensure the knowledge sticks in the memory of each student. Not every student is the same, so sometimes the effect is greater or less, but the basic principle remains the same.

You might be saying to yourself, “That’s great, but what does it have to do outside of the classroom?” One reason students have homework is to shorten the interval in which that memory is used. By causing a student to rehearse what he or she learned in school that day, homework helps solidify that information in the brain. When done properly, it aids knowledge retention and helps students speed up the learning process the next day. One way parents can help is to ask what was learned in school from the day. When we talk about what we have learned and show it to another person, it helps build the synaptic connections that cement a memory in our mind. Asking your kids to tell you what they learned in class can create an interval where memory is secured.

The expert in anything was once a beginner.
— Helen Hayes

Think of spaced learning as a form of meditation on what was learned. Psalm 119:97 states, “O how love I thy law! it is my meditation all the day.” When we bring those memories back, they bring other benefits as well. Keeping these intervals going helps reduce study anxiety, promotes deeper understanding, reduces mental exhaustion, and helps make real-world connections. So, how can you help your student succeed in spaced learning? Find a new concept that he or she learns at the beginning of the week. You can do this by asking your student or the teacher. Then, spend 5 or 10 minutes working on that concept. It might be as simple as rehearsing some history facts or working on a multiplication family. Do that every day of the week, but add a little more to what you did each day. At the end of the week, your child will see a marked improvement in what he or she knows.

Making Learning Useful - Applying Knowledge at Home

I’m sure you’ve probably heard it as a parent. You ask your child what he or she learned at school and the answer is, “I don’t know”. It probably drives you crazy wondering what it is you’re sending your child to school for. Don’t worry, your child is learning. He may just be embarrassed to let you in on his little secret knowledge or he may think it doesn’t matter outside of class. The truth is, when students don’t carry their learning outside of the classroom, it presents another problem - retention.

Courtesy Brett Jordan

Courtesy: Brett Jordan, Unsplash.com

When students learn a new fact or skill in class, it is usually accompanied by processes to cement that knowledge in the mind of students. The problem lies in the short amount of time knowledge is applied before the class must move onto another topic or subject. That is one reason why we love the A Beka curriculum at SBA. It uses a spiral technique that builds on prior knowledge to cement information in students’ minds. However, as students mature, the material they learn becomes more specialized as it prepares them for graduation and college. If they do not use it outside the classroom, they will lose it; and the longer it sits idle, the less of it remains in the synapses of the brain.

Transfer of Knowledge

We’ve all experienced this phenomenon. We learn a person’s name and soon forget it. We can’t figure out why, but it happened. Or, we are confronted with a situation that we used to do with ease but struggle to recall how to get it done, because we’re “a little rusty”. What happened? We didn’t transfer the information to a point of usefulness and it “aged” out of our mind. One way our teachers try to work around this issue is applying information across multiple subjects by establishing connections that allow students to use the information in more than one period a day or one day a week. But, you can help this, too. We call it the transfer of information and the more you can use a bit of information, the better chance you have of recalling it later. So, when you find out what your child is learning at school, find ways to use that information at home. Make connections with everyday items and situations. Every moment presents a chance to make this happen, even brushing teeth can be part of the process as children learn good hygiene habits (health), time to brush (time and math), the rhythm and tempo behind the brushing song, and what happens when we brush our teeth (science).

Knowledge is of no value unless you put it into practice. - Anton Chekhov

Take a moment to make those connections when you get the chance. In the car, at the dinner table, even getting ready for bed, you’ll be amazed at how creative you can be in making it happen and how you can assist your child in retaining the information he learns in school and go beyond the regular homework routine.

2020-2021 School Year

What a year it has been so far. I hope your summer has been uneventful and that you are getting ready for the new school year without too many distractions and stress. I am personally excited for the new school year to start. We have a great group of returning teachers and are excited to have Chris and Ashley Amaro joining us on the faculty this year. In addition, we are seeing growth in our student body and have additional projects in the works for this year to help our school become better.

COVID has created a new landscape for our country and that includes schooling. When we went into the lockdown last spring, I didn’t think it would go beyond a couple of weeks. Yet, here we are in August and it seems that lockdowns and quarantines are becoming the hot topic of the day. Of course, when it pertains to school, we find ourselves in a world of unknowns. I want you to know that we are working at navigating this time in the most prudent and effective way.

In the coming days, we will be releasing our plan to mitigate the spread of COVID in our school. I want you to understand that we will take whatever steps are in good faith and understanding, but we are up against an invisible agent that can spread readily before we are aware it is there. Please bear with us as we work through this together. The good news thus far is that children have shown a general resistance to the virus and its more serious complications. This gives me hope that we will be able to weather the storm caused by this virus and I am cautiously optimistic that we will be able to move through our school year without great interruption.

Be safe, and I look forward to seeing everyone on Monday, August 24th.