How to Revise A Level Biology: Keep Forgetting Things? Don't Despair!

A guest blog from Dr Jenny Shipway, who studied biochemistry at university and now works in science communication and education training.

The Art of Forgetting

Your brain is amazing

It’s frustrating when we forget things we want to remember, but this isn’t a failure of our brains - it’s an important feature. Remembering everything would cause all sorts of problems, so our brain spends a lot of time forgetting things. What colour coat was the first person to pass you on the street today wearing? How many bites did you take during lunch? What did your Year 5 teacher say on the third day of class?

Unfortunately perhaps, we can’t consciously tell our brains what to remember. So sometimes it forgets things we want to recall - like the internal structure of the kidney, or how oxygen dissociation curves work. We can’t tell it to remember anything, but we can encourage it to remember by giving it sigals that this stuff is important.

So how does the brain choose what to remember? There are a variety of signals that can flag things up as worth remembering, including:

1. Information that links nicely to prior knowledge
2. Information that connects to things the brain has already decided are important

Pay attention to the links between a new topic and things you’ve learned before. And make sure they agree - if there is a conflict your brain is more likely to forget (also it means there is something you don’t understand which needs re-studying!). If you previously learned that every human cell has a nucleus, but then read that red blood cells do not have a nucleus, take the time to work out how that can be, or you’re likely to forget the new information.

Information that connects to yourself - like a topic you had to present to the class, a question you answered during a lesson, or something that you can relate to your own body - is particularly likely to be remembered.

3. Information that has proven itself to be useful

Test your recall - if you remember the information successfully and this feels like an achievement, your brain will take note. Brains love feelings of success and are always eager for more. Even better, use the information to successfully solve a problem. Brains LOVE that.

In biology you have the added benefit of having stories about health. The brain is always keen to remember information from stories that could help you avoid future harm. Emotional/personal stories of people with medical problems that were (or could have been) overcome with a little biological knowledge are high priority for the brain.

Putting on your auntie’s hat and trying to ride your next door neighbour’s unicycle is a valid study strategy

4. Information gained during/after novel experiences

In a study, children remembered a lesson better if they had an unexpected music lesson just beforehand. (If the music lesson was expected, they did not remember so much.) How much novelty is required to get this memory boost is sadly unknown, but you could try studying in different places, or wearing something unusual, or trying a new activity beforehand? At least it gives you the excuse to take a break from your desk.

5. Information that satisfies your curiosity

In a study using Trivial Pursuit questions, people better remembered the facts they’d been more curious to know the answers to. Ask yourself questions as you go through a topic, get a step ahead of your learning and try to develop a curiosity for what comes next. If you don’t care, it’s going to be harder to remember. (If you lose all interest, take a break and try to ride a unicycle.)

6. Information that it receives on multiple occasions over a period of time

This one is really important. We generally forget things - even important things - bit by bit unless we think about them again. My memory of childhood holidays is largely centred around photographs, as they have reminded me of specific events over the years.

It’s totally normal to forget things the first time you learn them. And the second time. It can be frustrating to relearn things that you thought you knew, but this is just how learning works. You might feel you have made no progress after re-learning something for the third time, but that’s not true - every time you re-learn it, you will slow the rate of forgetting. Until, with enough recapping, you will fix the information in your long-term memory.

So, when you learn something, try to come back and recap it after about a week. And then again after maybe another couple of weeks. Then again after another month or so. This is called ‘spaced learning’ and it’s one of the most powerful and efficient techniques for getting stuff into your long-term memory.

Luckily for biology students, the topics are really interconnected. This means you will naturally get the chance to recall past topics when new ones relate to them, while you are thinking about all the connections.

Her brain’s still doing good stuff, so I reckon this counts as studying

Be kind to your brain

All of this learning is pretty hard work, and your brain will need some downtime to process everything behind the scenes.

Having a nap can be great for learning, but at the very least make sure you get a decent night’s sleep.

This is why last minute studying, staying up all night studying before an exam, is not recommended. Spreading your learning out over a longer period is much more efficient.

In a nutshell:

  • Don’t despair when you forget something you did previously, you’ve still made progress. Trust the process!

  • Every time you re-learn something, celebrate that you have moved the information one step closer to long term memory

  • Taking a break to do fun, novel activities - or to have a nap - can be good for your studying


Dr Jenny Shipway
www.jennyshipway.com

How to Revise A Level Biology: Use Your Brain

Have you ever listened to a talk where the lecturer explained everything so clearly that following their train of thought was effortless - everything made such perfect sense, and flowed together so well that it was a pleasure to listen to? I’ve been to talks like that, and loved them. I’ve gone home rhapsodising about how I learned so much. And then someone asks “What did you learn”? And - I realise there’s no residue of the talk in my mind. I can remember the experience, but not the information.

Read more

How to Revise A Level Biology: Making Connections

A guest blog from Dr Jenny Shipway, who studied biochemistry at university and now works in science communication and education training.

Everything’s Connected

Memory Palaces

Some people specialise in memorising long strings of boring information. One trick they use is to imagine the information located along a walking route. Imagine if you had to remember a list of household appliances. You might imagine a kettle outside your front door, and a dishwasher at the end of your garden path. There could be a toaster on the road outside, and a microwave on the corner down the road. As you mentally rewalked the route, you would ‘look’ in each location and see the objects, which would be remembered in the right order.

The reason why such tricks are necessary is that your brain can’t remember unrelated information. Every new tidbit must be linked to something that you already know. Linking it to something you know well, like the route from your house, helps pin it in place.

One of the great challenges of A level biology is that you need to really understand things, rather than just memorising facts and figures. It’s about deeper concepts rather than surface facts. But the good news is that this actually makes it easier to remember the associated facts - each piece of information is related to others, and the more interlinked it is, the easier it will be to recall.

Toto I don’t think we’re in GCSE any more

Synoptic Thinking

Some of the most challenging exam questions are those that require you to think between topics. Rather than drawing on your memory of one specific part of the course, they demand you reach into your understanding of multiple areas to solve a single problem. This is similar to the type of thinking you would need as a researcher, where bringing in knowledge from other disciplines can help solve problems in novel ways.

Although the A-level specification is split into sections, biology itself is a intricately interlinked tangle of concepts with uncountable interdependencies. Pity the teacher who has to decide in which order to tackle the topics given how everything seems to underpin everything else in some way or another.

How to Revise

Don’t avoid the complexities of how the topics interrelate. By noticing and thinking about these, you can make it easier to both understand and remember concepts. And make it easier for you to jump between different areas for those synoptic questions.

To really understand a complex concept, it’s necessary to look at it from different angles, on different days, considering multiple different examples. Brains are incredible things: when they are fed enough examples and surface facts, and allowed to really think, they can magic up a deep understanding beyond anything that is easily written down. It’s not possible to simply read this type of deep understanding in (brains are nothing like computers); the understanding has to be created in the context of your own mind. Looking at topics from the angle of intersecting topics is a great way to feed your brain with new information to help it build understanding.

When you spot a link to a previous topic, give yourself a bit of time to recall what you previously learned, to think about the new topic from that angle and consider how they intersect. As well as helping your brain build understanding, making these links will make it easier to recall information. The more interlinked information is, the easier it is to recall.

A blue kettle, shaped like a stove-top kettle, sat on white marble steps in front of the front door of a smart London townhouse.

What did your kettle look like?

Use Your Self

Every brain is different. Everyone who imagines walking past a kettle on their front step has a different image in mind. Do they imagine tripping over it if the step is narrow? Or is it sat on a plant pot? What colour is the kettle? Everything will be drawn from prior experience, and this is one of the reasons it works well as a memory trick - it’s linking to things your brain already know about.

If you can link anything in your course to strong memories, or especially to yourself, this will help you recall it later. When you learn about parts of the body, link it in your mind to your own experience of having a body. If you learn about a disease, think about someone you know with that disease while you study. Or imagine what it’d be like if you were a doctor treating it, or if you had it yourself - how you would feel, what you would do? Linking new information to our sense of self is possibly the strongest way to flag up information for later recall.

In a nutshell:

  • Identify and explore connections / interdependencies between biology topics

  • Think about concepts in the context of your own life

  • If you find something hard to remember, try finding more links between it and things you already know well

Dr Jenny Shipway
www.jennyshipway.com

How to Revise A Level Biology: Familiarity


A guest blog from Dr Jenny Shipway, who studied biochemistry at university and now works in science communication and education training.

Tricks of the Mind

The lazy brain

There's a dangerous trick your brain can play, which can fool you into using ineffective study techniques and lead to to exam-day confusion and disappointment. But you can overcome it if you know how.

You are sitting in the exam hall. The bell sounds to start the exam. You turn over the paper, read the question and smile. You confidently pick up your pen but … somehow you can’t pull up the knowledge you need. What was that word? You know you learned it, but your mind is blank.

After the exam, you talk to a friend. They tell you the word. “Aaah I knew that!!” you say. But no you didn’t; not when it mattered.

Did it really go in?

Your brain tricked you. Going through your notes before the exam, your brain seemed to be telling you that you knew all the content. However, really it was just telling you that your notes were familiar. You never asked if it could actually recall the information.

Human brains by nature like to minimise mental effort and to feel successful (it should be noted that these are features, not bugs). As a study technique, re-reading notes doesn’t strain your brain or make you feel like you’re failing in any way. You feel like you’re learning. But are you really? Is it possible to learn without making mental effort?

How to revise

In 2006, a study [1] was published comparing two groups of students, who studied some new information in two different ways. First they all had a look through the materials. Next, one set of students were asked to re-read everything, while the other set were asked to put the materials aside and write down everything they could remember. Some time later, both sets of students took an exam to see how much had stuck.

Going into the exam, the students who had had more time studying the information were more confident. They had been able to go through it a few times, so were more familiar with it. In contast, the students who had spent the second part of their time writing down what they had recalled were not so confident. They were aware that there were parts they had forgotten, and that they had been unable to recall it perfectly.

You can probably guess the exam results. Familiarity is not the same as learning, and the first set of students’ confidence was misplaced. The students who had practiced retriving the information from their memory during study time were better able to recall the same information in the exam.

Since then, many other studies have confirmed that practicing retrieval is a particularly effective way to study. It’s called the “Test Effect”. Recalling information flags it up in your brain as being worthwhile remembering for future use. Testing what you can recall even out-performs open-book mind-mapping; in a 2021 study [2] of biology studying techniques, mind-mapping wasn’t found to add anything to the boost students got from retrieval practice.

Keep the faith

Girl at desk revising but looking defeated, leaning back with open book over her face.

Gravity will draw the knowledge down into the brain. Maybe.

Retrieval is hard work and it can be frustrating or demoralising if you can’t remember everything you expected to. But it’s a fantastic way to learn content properly. Be reassured that the brain-ache you experience during retrieval is the feeling of effective learning. And if you can’t remember as much as you expected? You’ve been tricked by familiarity. But it’s great that you discovered this now, rather than in the exam.

So give it a try: after you revise a topic, put your books aside and just write down everything you can remember. See if your expectation matches reality. And when you can’t remember everything, you can still reassure your uncomfortable brain that it’s done a great job.

In a nutshell:

  • Practicing recall helps you know for sure what you don’t know

  • Practicing recall makes the information more easily remembered again in future

  • When you can’t remember something, that’s not failure - you have successfully identified something for re-study


Dr Jenny Shipway
www.jennyshipway.com





References:

[1] Henry L Roediger & Jeffrey D Karpicke, Test-Enhanced Learning: Taking Memory Tests Improves Retention, Psychological Science 2006, 17(3) 249-255.

[2] Garrett M. O’Day and Jeffrey D. Karpicke, Comparing and Combining Retrieval Practice and Concept Mapping, Journal of Educational Psychology 2021, Vol. 113, No. 5, 986–997.