A little something for us oldies:
Older brains benefit more from trial-and-error learning
Washington, Aug 24 : Older brains get more
benefit than younger brains from learning information the hard way, via
trial-and-error learning, a study led by scientists at Baycrest's
world-renowned Rotman Research Institute in Toronto has confirmed.
The finding will surprise professional
educators and cognitive rehabilitation clinicians as it challenges a large body
of published science which has shown that making mistakes while learning
information hurts memory performance for older adults, and that passive
"errorless" learning (where the correct answer is provided) is better
suited to older brains.
"The scientific literature has
traditionally embraced errorless learning for older adults," said
Andree-Ann Cyr, a doctoral student in Psychology (University of Toronto) and
the study's lead investigator.
"However, our study has shown that if
older adults are learning material that is very conceptual, where they can make
a meaningful relationship between their errors and the correct information that
they are supposed to remember, in those cases the errors can actually be quite
beneficial for the learning process," he stated.
In two separate studies, researchers
compared the memory benefits of trial-and-error learning (TEL) with errorless
learning (EL) in memory exercises with groups of healthy young and older
adults.
In both studies, participants remembered
the learning context of the target words better if they had been learned
through trial-and-error, relative to the errorless condition.
This was especially true for the older
adults whose performance benefited approximately 2.5 times more relative to
their younger peers.
The findings from the
Baycrest study may have important implications for how information is taught to
older adults in the classroom, and for rehabilitation procedures aimed at
delaying cognitive decline - procedures that rely on knowledge of how to train
an aging brain, said Cyr. (Agencies)Here is something to work on:
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