Y11W05WR Testing as learning, not measurement
Design a specific study plan for one subject this term that uses the testing effect, and explain why your plan is likely to produce better learning than your current approach.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What is the “testing effect” (Roediger and Karpicke)?
- ATesting measures learning but does not produce it
- BRe-reading produces the best results
- CBeing tested on material produces more durable learning than re-reading the same material
- DOnly high-stakes tests work
Q2.Which study method do students consistently rate as most effective, despite research ranking it among the least?
- AFlashcards
- BPractice problems
- CRe-reading
- DTeaching others
Show answer key
Q1 → C. Being tested on material produces more durable learning than re-reading the same material.The effect holds even when tests are low-stakes, ungraded, or self-administered — retrieval is the active ingredient, not the test itself.
Q2 → C. Re-reading.Re-reading produces the feeling of fluency that students trust — the article’s point about deceptive fluency.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Command verb
- DESIGN — a plan you could actually start tomorrow
- You pick
- ONE specific subject you are currently studying
- Goal
- specify frequency, timing, success criteria, what to do on failure, and how you’ll know it’s working
- Must reference
- Roediger and Karpicke’s research AND the article’s point about deceptive fluency
3Position nudge
Where on the range does your proposal sit?
Pole AMinor tweak to current approach
Pole BFull rebuild around retrieval
Commit to a specific point; defend it in your planner.
4Planner — design the thing, then the trade-offs
5Sentence stems
- My proposal is ___.
- I am grounding this in [researcher]’s finding that ___.
- The main trade-off is ___: this design gains ___ but loses ___.
- The most predictable objection is ___, and my response is ___.
- I would know it was working after [time] if ___.
- What I am most likely to abandon is ___, so I will build in ___ to prevent that.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) My proposal is a retrieval-based plan for Biology this term. (2) I currently re-read my notes the night before a test, which Roediger and Karpicke show is among the least effective methods despite feeling fluent. (3) The plan: after each lesson, I write three free-recall questions without looking at my notes, attempt them 24 hours later, revisit the wrong ones after 3 days and again after 10. (4) The main risk is that I skip the 10-day revisit when assessments pile up; I will pre-schedule it in my calendar rather than relying on intention. (5) I would know it worked if my end-of-topic quiz scores improved by one grade band.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- States the plan and subject concretely.
- Compares to current approach, cites research.
- Specifies frequency and timing.
- Names the predictable failure and a countermeasure.
- Commits to a concrete success signal.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.