How the Spaced Repetition Technique Improves Memory

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "The Master Guides: Supercharge Your Memory" by Shortform. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.

Like this article? Sign up for a free trial here.

What is the best memory retention method? Can the spaced repetition technique improve your memory retrieval?

The spaced repetition technique involves giving your brain time between repetitions of information instead of repeating information many times in a short period. This improves the chances that you will commit the information to long-term memory, where rote memorization tends to rely only on short-term memory.

Learn how to use the spaced repetition technique to enhance your studying practice.

What Is the Spaced Repetition Technique?

Your brain remembers information best by engaging with it repeatedly over time—this memory retention method is called “spaced repetition.” The more time that passes after you learn something, the more information you forget. The key to overcoming this is to review the information again right before you’re about to forget it. Keep doing this each time you feel you’re close to forgetting the material. Each time you review it, you’ll be able to remember the information for longer, eventually fully ingraining it into your long-term memory.

Novelist and former management consultant Peter C. Brown and cognitive scientists Henry Roediger and Mark McDaniel (Make It Stick) offer additional insights on the benefits of the spaced repetition technique. Instead of focusing on one skill or topic at a time—a strategy called massed practice—spaced practice gives your brain the time it needs to strengthen new knowledge and store it in your long-term memory through a process called consolidation.

Here are two ways to practice the spaced repetition technique and improve your memory-retrieval skills: 

1) Diversify Your Studies 

The first memory retention method is to diversify your studies among multiple related topics or skills. For example, if you’re learning how to calculate volumes of different geometric shapes, mix up the problems—doing a sphere problem, then a cube problem, then another sphere problem—instead of grouping your practice problems by shape. Brown, Roediger, and McDaniel explain that diversifying in this way helps you make mental connections to the other subjects you mix in. They stress that the key to this approach is to switch to the next skill or concept before you’ve finished practicing one. It feels frustrating to switch gears before you’re ready, but this spaced repetition technique improves your long-term retention. 

How the Spaced Repetition Technique Improves Memory

———End of Preview———

Like what you just read? Read the rest of the world's best book summary and analysis of Shortform's "The Master Guides: Supercharge Your Memory" at Shortform.

Here's what you'll find in our full The Master Guides: Supercharge Your Memory summary:

  • Memory retention methods from a diverse group of experts
  • Three techniques for enhancing your note-taking abilities
  • Three active learning strategies to help you solidify your long-term memory

Becca King

Becca’s love for reading began with mysteries and historical fiction, and it grew into a love for nonfiction history and more. Becca studied journalism as a graduate student at Ohio University while getting their feet wet writing at local newspapers, and now enjoys blogging about all things nonfiction, from science to history to practical advice for daily living.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *