Education.com

Study Strategies (page 3)

By D. W. Moore |S.A. Moore|P.M. Cunningham| J.W. Cunningham
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall
Updated on Jul 20, 2010

Creating Mnemonic Devices

Mnemonic devices—memory aids named after the Greek goddess of memory, Mnemosyne—include several disparate techniques (Glynn, Koballa, & Coleman, 2003). Analogies stress the similarities between phenomena. For instance, the cell structure of a plant might be compared with the factory structure of an industry. Effective speakers, writers, and teachers frequently use analogies to help students use what they already know to help them understand and remember new knowledge.

Images become mnemonic devices when they are used to represent abstract concepts. For example, a visual image of mist coming from a block of dry ice might be used to represent the physical process of sublimation, the change of a solid directly into a gas. Most of us associate personal or public events of the past with certain images that make those events come alive for us even now.

Mnemonic devices also take such forms as abbreviations (FBI, NAACP, NCAA), acronyms (HOMES for the first letters of the Great Lakes), acrostics (“My very educated mother just served us nine pizzas” for the first letters of the planets in order from the Sun), and rhymes (“In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue”). They also can be phrases that help with meaning (“Hang on tight” for remembering that stalactites are on cave ceilings rather than floors) as well as pronunciation (“It’s hot again” indicates the accent to Betatakin, a cliff dwelling in Arizona’s Navajo National Monument).

Creating Special Word Associations

A set of mnemonic devices that is large enough and important enough to warrant separate treatment involves individual words. Because understanding and remembering subject matter vocabulary consumes a great deal of students’ attention.


Meaningful word parts, or morphemes, are found in derived words with their prefixes, roots, and suffixes. Contractions and compound words also contain these parts. Students often benefit from attending to the meaningful parts of such words as underground, triangular, and immortalize. Identifying the meaningful parts of words provides control of them and a tool for identifying new words.

Idiosyncratic associations are similar to meaningful word parts, although the word parts are not from our linguistic heritage. Knowing that the principal should be your friend and that latitude runs the same way as the equator represent idiosyncratic associations.

The mnemonic keyword method requires first an acoustic link, then a visual one. For instance, to remember that a credenza is a piece of furniture like a buffet or sideboard, the students might recode the word to an acoustic link, such as dents. A visual image of someone bumping into and denting the furniture could then be constructed.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.