Rote learning is essential for a child’s education - play isn’t, says leading neuroscientist

University of Texas academic says more emphasis should be placed on memorisation to lay the foundations for more complex tasks
26th October 2016, 2:40pm

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Rote learning is essential for a child’s education - play isn’t, says leading neuroscientist

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/rote-learning-essential-childs-education-play-isnt-says-leading-neuroscientist
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Traditional approaches to education such as practising rote learning and improving students’ memories are essential to allow for more complex tasks, a leading expert in cognitive science has said.

Helen Abadzi, who was an education specialist at the World Bank, said that pupils who “overlearn” and repeatedly practise tasks, such as mental arithmetic, free up their working memory for more “higher order” analytical thinking.

Dr Abadzi, an expert in cognitive psychology and neuroscience at he University of Texas at Arlington, criticised more “progressive” approaches to learning from the likes of education adviser and author Sir Ken Robinson.

She argued that people are “basically prisoners of their working memory”. By repeating tasks, such as times tables, it becomes automatic and unconscious, freeing up space in the working memory for more complex calculations, she said.

“When people talk about practice and the low-level skills, people end up saying, ‘Your thinking is out of the Stone Age’,” Dr Abadzi said. “Unfortunately, our DNA is out of the Stone Age.”

‘The traditional methods have worked for centuries’

There is a reason why some elements of traditional methods of teaching have stood the test of time, she added, as they help the brain to remember and make correct decisions.

“‘Traditional’ means we’ve been doing it for two, three, five centuries - it’s actually a good indication that it works because our memory system can do this stuff,” she said.

“People may not like methods like direct instruction - “repeat after me” - but they help students to remember over the long term. A class of children sitting and listening is viewed as a negative thing, yet lecturing is highly effective for brief periods.”

It is important for parents, teachers and pupils to understand the benefits of practising to lay down the foundations for more complex tasks, according to Dr Abadzi, who was speaking at an event organised by exam board Cambridge Assessment.

“Those who practise the most forget the least over time,” she said. “So-called ‘overlearning’ protects from forgetting, because consolidation requires repetition - small bits learned at a time”. 

The academic highlighted Sir Ken Robinson, whose TED talk “Do Schools Kill Creativity?” is the most watched of all time, for advising young people to just “go out and play”.

“Go out and play, well sure - but is that going to teach me mental math so I can go to a store and instantly make a decision about what is the best offer to buy?” she said.

 

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