Y11W05VC Testing as learning, not measurement

Ask a typical student how they study for an exam and you'll hear something familiar: re-reading notes, highlighting, reviewing chapters. Ask a top student and the answer is often strikingly different: closing the book and trying to remember what was in it. These two approaches look like styles. They're not. One produces reliable learning; the other mostly doesn't. This week's article examines a finding that most students are still missing.

Core Vocabulary

elegantly

/ˈɛɡəntli/|el·e·gant·ly

adverb

In a manner that is graceful, refined, and impressively simple; with clever efficiency.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "elegans" (refined, tasteful). Related to "eligere" (to select, choose carefully).

Word family: elegant (adj), elegantly (adv), elegance (n), inelegant (adj), inelegantly (adv)

Synonyms: gracefully, beautifully, sophisticatedly, cleverly, simply

Collocations: elegantly designed, elegantly simple, elegantly solved, elegantly demonstrated

Example: Testing elegantly enhances learning by forcing the brain to retrieve and reorganise information.

In the articleTheir design was elegantly simple.

retain

/rɪˈteɪn/|re·tain

verb

To keep or continue to have something; to hold something in the mind or memory.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "retinere" (to hold back), from re- (back) + tenere (to hold).

Word family: retain (v), retained (v), retains (v), retention (n), retentive (adj)

Synonyms: keep, hold, maintain, preserve, remember

Collocations: retain information, retain knowledge, retain memory, retain details, retain ability

Example: Students who are tested on material retain it far better than those who simply re-read notes.

In the articleThis single habit will dramatically improve what you retain.

durable

/ˈdjʊərəbəl/ or /ˈdʊrəbəl/|dur·a·ble

adjective

Able to withstand wear, pressure, or damage; lasting or long-lasting.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "durabilis" (lasting), from "durare" (to last). Related to "durus" (hard, enduring).

Word family: durable (adj), durably (adv), durability (n), endure (v), duration (n)

Synonyms: long-lasting, hardy, strong, lasting, robust

Collocations: durable goods, durable learning, durable memory, durable knowledge, durable effects

Example: Testing creates more durable memories than cramming because it strengthens neural pathways through retrieval practice.

In the articleThe students who had spent their study time trying to remember the material — often awkwardly, often getting things wrong, often feeling they weren't learning — had built significantly more durable knowledge than the students who had spent their time calmly re-reading.

audacious

/ɔːˈdeɪʃəs/|au·da·cious

adjective

Daring, bold, or adventurous; showing courage or willingness to take risks despite potential danger.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "audax" (bold, daring), from "audere" (to dare). Related to "audacity" (boldness).

Word family: audacious (adj), audaciously (adv), audacity (n), audaciousness (n)

Synonyms: bold, daring, courageous, fearless, adventurous

Collocations: audacious claim, audacious idea, audacious attempt, audacious experiment, audacious move

Example: It seems audacious to claim that more testing improves learning, yet the evidence overwhelmingly supports this counterintuitive finding.

robust

/roʊˈbʌst/ or /ˈroʊbəst/|ro·bust

adjective

Strong and healthy; able to withstand variation, adversity, or criticism without breaking down.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "robustus" (strong, sturdy), from "robur" (oak wood, strength).

Word family: robust (adj), robustly (adv), robustness (n)

Synonyms: strong, sturdy, resilient, hardy, tough

Collocations: robust evidence, robust findings, robust methodology, robust design, robust results

Example: The testing effect is robust; it appears across ages, materials, and retention intervals.

In the articleThe research showing this is as robust as anything in cognitive psychology, and yet it's still missing from how most people actually study — including people who teach for a living.

salient

/ˈseɪliənt/ or /ˈseɪljənt/|sa·lient

adjective

Most noticeable, important, or prominent; standing out as particularly significant or memorable.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "saliens" (jumping, leaping), from "salire" (to leap, jump).

Word family: salient (adj), saliently (adv), saliency (n), salience (n)

Synonyms: prominent, noticeable, striking, significant, conspicuous

Collocations: salient feature, salient point, salient fact, salient issue, salient memory

Example: The effort required during testing makes the learning more salient in memory.

In the articleWhen you fail to retrieve it — which is productive too, if you then look up the answer — the gap in your knowledge becomes salient, and the subsequent encoding is more durable.

inverted

/ɪnˈvɜːtɪd/|in·vert·ed

adjective/verb (past)

Turned upside down or inside out; reversed in order, position, or relationship.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "invertere" (to turn upside down), from in- (in, into) + vertere (to turn).

Word family: invert (v), inverted (adj), inverting (v), inversion (n), inverse (adj)

Synonyms: reversed, upside-down, flipped, turned, opposite

Collocations: inverted pyramid, inverted comma, inverted relationship, inverted order, inverted classroom

Example: The inverted classroom model has students test themselves at home and learn actively in class with teacher feedback.

In the articleThe feeling of learning and actual learning are often inverted.

reconstruct

/ˌriːkənˈstrʌkt/|re·con·struct

verb

To build or create something again; to restore or piece together from fragments or memory.

Word Breakdown: From Latin "reconstructus", from re- (again) + construere (to build). Con- (together) + struere (to pile, build).

Word family: reconstruct (v), reconstructed (v), reconstruction (n), reconstructive (adj)

Synonyms: rebuild, restore, reassemble, recreate, piece together

Collocations: reconstruct memory, reconstruct evidence, reconstruct history, reconstruct process

Example: When students must reconstruct information during a test, their brains encode it more deeply than when passively reviewing.

In the articleWhen you're reading a book you want to remember, pause at the end of each chapter and try to reconstruct its key points from memory before turning the page.

Technical Terms

testing effect

/ˈtɛstɪŋ ɪˈfɛkt/|test·ing ef·fect

noun phrase

the finding that retrieval practice produces stronger memory than re-reading

Synonyms: retrieval benefit, practice testing benefit, test-enhanced learning

Collocations: demonstrate the testing effect, leverage the testing effect, testing effect research

Example: Research on the testing effect consistently shows that students who quiz themselves after reading remember significantly more one week later than those who simply read the material again.

In the articleKarpicke and Roediger called this the testing effect, or sometimes retrieval practice.

retrieval practice

/rɪˈtriːv(ə)l ˈpræktɪs/|re·triev·al prac·tice

noun phrase

studying by bringing information back from memory

Synonyms: practice testing, active recall, test-enhanced learning

Collocations: engage in retrieval practice, retrieval practice effect, retrieval practice strengthens memory

Example: Students who used retrieval practice — closing their notes and writing down everything they could recall — consistently outperformed re-readers on delayed tests.

In the articleKarpicke and Roediger called this the testing effect, or sometimes retrieval practice.

desirable difficulties

/dɪˈzaɪərəb(ə)l ˈdɪfɪk(ə)ltiz/|de·sir·a·ble dif·fi·cul·ties

noun phrase

Bjork's term for effortful practices that feel harder but produce better learning

Synonyms: productive challenges, beneficial obstacles, useful cognitive friction

Collocations: create desirable difficulties, desirable difficulty principle, benefit from desirable difficulties

Example: The difficulty of trying to recall information from memory rather than looking it up is a desirable difficulty — the cognitive effort of retrieval is precisely what drives durable learning.

In the articleThe educational psychologist Robert Bjork, whose broader work on what he calls desirable difficulties has been influential here, uses a striking analogy.

meta-analysis

/ˌmɛtə əˈnæləsɪs/|me·ta-a·nal·y·sis

noun phrase

a statistical synthesis of findings across many independent studies

Synonyms: systematic review synthesis, pooled study analysis, aggregated research review

Collocations: conduct a meta-analysis, meta-analysis of studies, meta-analytic review

Example: The researchers conducted a meta-analysis combining data from over two hundred studies on retrieval practice, finding a consistently strong and reliable effect on long-term memory.

In the articleThis fluency, Robert Bjork has pointed out elsewhere, is easily mistaken for understanding.

fluency

/ˈfluːənsi/|flu·en·cy

noun

The felt ease of recognising, reading or processing material, often mistaken for genuine understanding or retention.

Word Breakdown: From Latin fluere, meaning 'to flow'; fluency suggests smooth, easy processing.

Word family: fluent (adj.), fluently (adv.), fluency (n.), disfluency (n.)

Synonyms: ease, smoothness, processing ease

Collocations: processing fluency, fluency effect, mistaken fluency, reading fluency

Example: Rereading notes creates fluency because the material feels familiar, even when the student may not be able to recall it later.

In the articleThis fluency, Robert Bjork has pointed out elsewhere, is easily mistaken for understanding.

Figurative Phrases

on the surface

at first glance, superficially

Etymology/Type: figurative, not about an actual surface

Synonyms: at first glance, superficially, outwardly

Example: On the surface, re-reading feels productive — the material flows easily and the mind registers familiarity, creating a comfortable but deceptive sense of progress.

In the articleThese two approaches look, on the surface, like different styles.

sinking in

becoming understood

Etymology/Type: metaphor; information doesn't literally sink

Synonyms: being absorbed, taking hold, becoming understood

Example: She read the paragraph four times before the argument finally started sinking in — evidence that understanding requires active engagement, not passive repetition.

In the articleThe re-reading feels productive — it goes smoothly, the material seems to be sinking in, the studying feels successful.

an axe to grind

a hidden personal agenda

Etymology/Type: idiom; nothing to do with actual axes

Synonyms: a personal agenda, a self-interested motive, a point to push

Example: Critics suggested the researcher had an axe to grind, having built her entire career on an approach that the new meta-analysis was now challenging.

In the articleIt's based on a broad, varied, replicated literature produced over decades by researchers with no particular axe to grind.

calmly re-reading

reading without effort

Etymology/Type: calmly' doing figurative work, suggesting passivity rather than serenity

Synonyms: reviewing passively, restudying without effort, reading again without challenge

Example: Calmly re-reading notes may feel thorough, but it produces far less durable memory than the effortful process of testing yourself on the same material.

In the articleThe students who had spent their study time trying to remember the material — often awkwardly, often getting things wrong, often feeling they weren't learning — had built significantly more durable knowledge than the students who had spent their time calmly re-reading.

intellectual play

low

Etymology/Type: stakes exploratory learning — figurative, contrasts with 'serious' study

Synonyms: cognitive exploration, playful inquiry, mental experimentation

Example: The best exam preparation involves intellectual play — turning ideas over, testing them against each other, and asking what would follow if your central assumption were wrong.

In the articleThe ideal practice looks less like formal testing and more like intellectual play: trying to remember something, getting most of it, missing parts, looking those parts up, trying again tomorrow.

reaching for a memory

trying to retrieve

Etymology/Type: metaphorical reach, not physical

In the articleThe act of reaching for a memory strengthens that memory in a way that simply re-exposing yourself to the same information does not.

Confusing Words

retain vs retrieve

These verbs both concern memory, but they describe two different stages of the memory process — holding information versus recovering it.

  • retainto keep information in memory over time; to hold onto what has been learned so it does not fade. The question "will you retain this?" asks whether the memory will still be available later. Retention is about the durability of learning.
  • retrieveto actively bring stored information back into conscious awareness. Retrieval requires mental effort — it is the act of pulling from memory, not merely having something stored there. A person may retain information without being able to retrieve it fluently under exam conditions.

If describing whether information has been kept in memory over time, use retain. If describing the active process of bringing information back from memory, use retrieve.

robust vs rigorous

Both words are used to praise research quality, but they describe different virtues — one about the strength of the findings, the other about the quality of the methods.

  • robuststrong and consistent across different conditions, samples, and methods. A robust finding holds up when tested again in varied contexts; the effect does not disappear when the sample or approach changes. Robustness is a quality of the result.
  • rigorousconducted with strict attention to method, precision, and logic. A rigorous study is carefully designed: controls are in place, confounds are addressed, analysis is thorough. Rigour is a quality of the process, independent of how strong the outcome turns out to be.

If describing the strength and consistency of findings across contexts, use robust. If describing the care and precision of the methods used, use rigorous.

inverted vs reversed

These near-synonyms both describe something turned around, but they operate in slightly different directions and contexts.

  • invertedturned upside down or structurally flipped. An inverted relationship is one where high becomes low and low becomes high. An inverted U-curve rises and then falls. The image is of spatial or structural rotation: something turned on its head.
  • reversedchanged to run in the opposite direction; turned back from its previous course. A reversed decision runs contrary to the earlier one; a reversed sequence proceeds backwards. The image is of direction or order: something that was proceeding one way now proceeds the other.

If describing a structural flip or a top-to-bottom exchange of positions, use inverted. If describing a direction or sequence being turned back or changed to its opposite, use reversed.