Improve Your Learning By Teaching
You might be looking for new ways to improve your understanding of
something you are studying. Perhaps you are seeking better methods to
remember important information.
One way to help you reach these goals is to try teaching – not as a job,
but as a way to improve your own learning.
In today’s Education Tips, we will explore how teaching could help your
studies.
Background
Researchers and educators have been interested in the link between
teaching and learning for quite some time.
A 1982 study found that tutoring helped both the tutors and the people
who studied with them.
Tutoring means teaching one person or a very small group of students.
“Like the children they helped, the tutors gained a better understanding
of and developed more positive attitudes toward the subject matter
covered in the tutorial program,” the researchers wrote.
Attitude is a term that means the way you think or feel about something.
Also in the 1980s, Jean-Pol Martin, a French teacher in Germany,
developed a way of teaching that asked students to teach each other.
Martin taught language classes, but he expanded his “Learning by
Teaching” method, also called LdL, to include other subjects as well.
More recent studies
More recent studies have looked at the link between teaching and memory.
A 2013 study, which we briefly described in a previous Education Tips,
found that teaching had a strong effect on understanding and learning.
An important part of the study compared the learning results of people
who actually taught a lesson to those who simply prepared but did not
teach.
“Overall, these findings suggest that when students actually teach the
content of a lesson, they develop a deeper and more persistent
understanding of the material than from solely preparing to teach,” the
researchers wrote.
Persistent is a term that means continuing beyond the usual or expected
amount of time.
Why Does Teaching Improve Learning?
Scientists have also explored the question of why teaching improves
learning.
A 2018 study suggests that teaching may help your learning because you
have to remember the information you have learned as you continue to
teach. Experts call this “retrieval.”
The researchers wrote that “retrieval practice possibly causes the
learning benefits of teaching.”
Practice is a term that means to do something over and over again to
become better at it.
The basic idea is that if you want to improve your memory of what you
have learned, you have to practice remembering that information.
While retrieval may be one reason that teaching helps learning, there
could be other reasons. The issue remains an open question.
Ideas for how to start teaching
The good news is that there are many ways that you can improve your
learning by teaching.
One way might be to teach your family or friends about something that
you are learning. For example, you could teach your parents about
English grammar or vocabulary.
You could also try teaching a younger person – perhaps a cousin, brother
or sister. Try to make your lessons simple and clear, and ask them what
they do not understand.
The process of teaching and asking for feedback will help you realize
that you may not understand some things as well as you thought you did.
That is an important, necessary step in the learning process.
Another idea is to imagine yourself describing a lesson to someone, or
to write the lesson down. In the Guardian newspaper, David Robson
suggests that you could write an email describing what you have learned
in great detail.
A final idea for those who like technology: You could record video of
yourself teaching information. You could then send the lesson to friends
or put it on YouTube or some other social media service.
Give teaching a try and let us know if it improves your learning! |