Make It Stick: The Science of Successful Learning by Brown, Roediger, and McDaniel (2014).

Many of these ideas are also expressed by a series of short videos by Prof. Chew of Samford University.
- low level of interest
- “it’s worked for me”
- it’s what teachers have trained us to do
- classes/tests are low-level of complexity (i.e., recall only)
- classes are non-cumulative and non-accountable
| blocked/mass practice | cramming |
| highlighting | interleaved practice |
| varied practice | building mental model |
| rereading texts | spaced practice |
| elaboration | summarizing |
Mnemonic?
Interest and motivation are necessary, but not sufficient—as we’ll see from Chew.
| Fixed | Growth |
|---|---|
| avoid challenges | embraces challenges |
| gives up easily | persists in obstacles |
| see effort as fruitless | sees effort as necessary |
| ignores useful criticism | learns from criticism |
| threatened by others | inspired by others’ success |
One cannot analyze what one knows if one knows nothing. (SternbergSternberg 2015, p. 422)
students in the active classroom learn more, but they feel like they learn less. … [this] is caused in part by the increased cognitive effort required during active learning. (DeslauriersEtal 2019)
As the sports adage goes, “practice like you play and you will play like you practice.” (BrownRoedigerMcdaniel 2014, “Make it stick”, p. 57)
With 3–4 peers, come up with mnemonics for DNS, IP, TCP, HTTP, and SSL.
Look for evidence/mapping of terms we learned in the video.
Identify the six productive practices
| blocked/mass practice | cramming |
| highlighting | interleaved practice |
| varied practice | build mental model |
| rereading texts | spaced practice |
| elaboration | summarizing |