Monash Rural Health- Churchill, Churchill, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One. 2021 May 18;16(5):e0251710. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251710. eCollection 2021.
Writing and digital storage have largely replaced organic memory for encoding and retrieval of information in the modern era, with a corresponding decrease in emphasis on memorization in Western education. In health professional training, however, there remains a large corpus of information for which memorization is the most efficient means of ensuring: A) that the trainee has the required information readily available; and B) that a foundation of knowledge is laid, upon which the medical trainee builds multiple, complex layers of detailed information during advanced training. The carefully staged progression in early- to late- years' medical training from broad concepts (e.g. gross anatomy and pharmacology) to in-depth, specialised disciplinary knowledge (e.g. surgical interventions and follow-on care post-operatively) has clear parallels to the progression of training and knowledge exposure that Australian Aboriginal youths undergo in their progression from childhood to adulthood to Tribal Elders.
As part of the Rural Health curriculum and the undergraduate Nutrition and Dietetics program in the Monash University Faculty of Medicine, Nursing, and Health Sciences, we tested Australian Aboriginal techniques of memorization for acquisition and recall of novel word lists by first-year medical students (N = 76). We also examined undergraduate student evaluations (N = 49) of the use of the Australian Aboriginal memory technique for classroom study of foundational biomedical knowledge (the tricarboxylic acid cycle) using qualitative and quantitative analytic methods drawing from Bloom's taxonomy for orders of thinking and learning. Acquisition and recall of word lists were assessed without memory training, or after training in either the memory palace technique or the Australian Aboriginal narrative technique.
Both types of memory training improved the number of correctly recalled items and reduced the frequency of specific error types relative to untrained performance. The Australian Aboriginal method resulted in approximately a 3-fold greater probability of improvement to accurate recall of the entire word list (odds ratio = 2.82; 95% c.i. = 1.15-6.90), vs. the memory palace technique (odds ratio = 2.03; 95% c.i. = 0.81-5.06) or no training (odds ratio = 1.5; 95% c.i. = 0.54-4.59) among students who did not correctly recall all list items at baseline. Student responses to learning the Australian Aboriginal memory technique in the context of biomedical science education were overwhelmingly favourable, and students found both the training and the technique enjoyable, interesting, and more useful than rote memorization. Our data indicate that this method has genuine utility and efficacy for study of biomedical sciences and in the foundation years of medical training.
在现代社会,书写和数字存储在很大程度上已经取代了有机记忆,用于编码和检索信息,因此西方教育对记忆的重视程度也相应降低。然而,在医疗专业培训中,仍然有大量的信息需要记忆,这是确保以下两点的最有效方法:A)学员随时掌握所需信息;B)为学员打下知识基础,在此基础上,医学生在高级培训中构建多个复杂的详细信息层。在早期到后期的医学培训中,从广泛的概念(例如大体解剖学和药理学)到深入的专业学科知识(例如手术干预和术后随访)的精心分级进展,与澳大利亚原住民青年从童年到成年再到部落长老的培训和知识暴露的进展有着明显的相似之处。
作为蒙纳士大学医学、护理和健康科学学院农村卫生课程和本科营养与饮食学课程的一部分,我们测试了澳大利亚原住民的记忆技巧,以帮助一年级医学生(N=76)学习和回忆新单词列表。我们还使用来自布鲁姆教育目标分类法的定性和定量分析方法,检查了本科生对使用澳大利亚原住民记忆技巧进行基础生物医学知识(三羧酸循环)课堂学习的评估(N=49)。在没有记忆训练的情况下,或者在记忆宫殿技术或澳大利亚原住民叙述技术的训练后,评估单词列表的获取和回忆。
两种类型的记忆训练都提高了正确回忆的项目数量,并减少了特定错误类型的频率,与未经训练的表现相比。与记忆宫殿技术(比值比=2.03;95%置信区间=0.81-5.06)或无训练(比值比=1.5;95%置信区间=0.54-4.59)相比,澳大利亚原住民方法使准确回忆整个单词列表的可能性增加了大约 3 倍(比值比=2.82;95%置信区间=1.15-6.90)。在基线时未正确回忆出所有列表项目的学生中,学生对在生物医学科学教育背景下学习澳大利亚原住民记忆技巧的反应非常积极,学生认为培训和技巧既有趣又有用,比死记硬背更有用。我们的数据表明,这种方法对于生物医学科学的学习和医学培训的基础阶段具有真正的效用和效果。