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081127882 is a hard number to remember.
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If you chunk the number into 081 127 882 its easier.
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Cutting large bits of information into smaller pieces
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helps us to understand.
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If we put small pieces back together,
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we can see the big picture and that helps us to remember.
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The process is called Chunking.
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This is how it works.
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Our short-term is fast but tiny.
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According to learning expert Dr. Oakley
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it can hold only 4 chunks of information at once.
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So when new inputs arrive it has two ways to pick them up.
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First, it can overwrite and forget what it has
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to make space for new information.
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Or it can use mental effort
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to move a chunk from the working memory
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into the long-term memory
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where it can be stored and remembered later.
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This is why its almost impossible
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to recall 9 digits like 081127882.
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There is simply not enough space.
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Once chunked, there is.
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There are several ways to chunk.
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You can break a larger piece into smaller bits,
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identify patterns or group pieces to see the larger picture.
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Once a chunk is created,
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you can use deliberate practice
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to move it into your long-term memory
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where it connects with exercising experiences.
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Now it can be stored for years
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and if regularly used,
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accessed without much mental effort
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To make this transfer more effective
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it helps to add context
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which acts like memory super glue.
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Great instructors always try to give you the big picture
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before going into detail.
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If you study by yourself,
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you can skim through your textbook first
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by reading chapter headlines.
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Learning facts without understanding the big picture
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is pretty useless,
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as we will forget what we have learned very fast.
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Professional piano teachers first show their students the entire song
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so they understand the mood.
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Then they ask their students to practice one measure at the time.
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Once the part has been learned and
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the neural connections in the brain has been built,
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then students go to the next measure.
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After all chunks can be played separately,
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they are combined until the entire piece is connected.
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Now the student can play the piece with less mental effort.
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Chunking also helps to understand complex topics,
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say trade between China and India.
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First study China: the people,
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the culture and the economy.
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Then summarize and put what you learned
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in your own simple language.
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Repeat the process for India.
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Then study trade itself:
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the mechanics,
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benefits and problems.
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Again, simplify to form an underlying idea.
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At the end,
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you might just have summarized several books onto one napkin.
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Try chunking next time you feel the limits
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of your working memory.
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Just like how clever restaurants chunks their menus into starters,
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mains, desserts, with 3-4 options each.
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With chunking it's easy to compare our options
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and make a decision.
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