| name | memory-retrieval-learning |
| description | Use when long-term knowledge retention is needed (weeks to months), studying for exams or certifications, learning new job skills or technology, mastering substantial material that requires systematic review, combating forgetting through spaced repetition and retrieval practice, or when user mentions studying, memorizing, learning plans, spaced repetition, flashcards, active recall, or durable learning. |
Memory, Retrieval & Learning
Table of Contents
Purpose
Create evidence-based learning plans that maximize long-term retention through spaced repetition, retrieval practice, and interleaving.
When to Use
Use memory-retrieval-learning when you need to:
Exam & Certification Prep:
- Study for professional certifications (AWS, CPA, PMP, bar exam, medical boards)
- Prepare for academic exams (SAT, GRE, finals)
- Master substantial material over weeks/months
- Retain knowledge for high-stakes tests
Professional Learning:
- Learn new technology stack or programming language
- Master company product knowledge
- Study industry regulations and compliance
- Transition to new career field
- Learn software tools and methodologies
Language Learning:
- Master vocabulary and grammar rules
- Learn verb conjugations and sentence patterns
- Study pronunciation and idioms
- Build conversational fluency
Skill Mastery:
- Learn complex procedures (medical, technical, safety)
- Master formulas, equations, or algorithms
- Memorize taxonomies or classification systems
- Study historical facts, dates, or sequences
What Is It
Memory-retrieval-learning applies cognitive science research on how humans learn durably:
Key Principles:
- Spaced Repetition: Review material at increasing intervals (1 day, 3 days, 7 days, 14 days, 30 days)
- Retrieval Practice: Test yourself actively rather than passively re-reading
- Interleaving: Mix different topics/types rather than blocking by type
- Elaboration: Connect new knowledge to existing understanding
Quick Example:
Learning Spanish verb conjugations:
Week 1: Learn 20 new verbs → Test yourself same day
Week 1: Review those 20 verbs after 1 day → Test
Week 1: Review after 3 days → Test
Week 2: Review after 7 days → Test + Add 20 new verbs
Week 3: Review old verbs after 14 days → Test + Continue new verbs
Week 5: Review after 30 days → Test
This combats the forgetting curve by reviewing just before you'd forget.
Workflow
Copy this checklist and track your progress:
Learning Plan Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Define learning goals and timeline
- [ ] Step 2: Break down material and create schedule
- [ ] Step 3: Design retrieval practice methods
- [ ] Step 4: Execute daily learning sessions
- [ ] Step 5: Track progress and adjust
Step 1: Define learning goals and timeline
Clarify what needs to be learned, by when, and how much time is available daily. Identify success criteria (pass exam, demonstrate skill, etc). Use resources/template.md to structure your plan.
Step 2: Break down material and create schedule
Chunk material into learnable units. Calculate spaced repetition schedule based on timeline. Plan initial learning + review cycles. For complex schedules or long timelines (6+ months), see resources/methodology.md for advanced scheduling techniques.
Step 3: Design retrieval practice methods
Create active recall mechanisms: flashcards, practice problems, mock tests, self-quizzing. Avoid passive techniques (highlighting, re-reading). See Common Patterns for domain-specific approaches.
Step 4: Execute daily learning sessions
Follow the schedule: new material in morning (peak alertness), reviews in afternoon/evening. Use retrieval practice consistently. Log what's difficult for extra review. For advanced techniques like interleaving or desirable difficulties, see resources/methodology.md.
Step 5: Track progress and adjust
Measure retention with self-tests. Adjust review frequency based on performance (struggle more = review sooner). Update schedule as needed. Validate using resources/evaluators/rubric_memory_retrieval_learning.json.
Common Patterns
Exam Preparation (3-6 months):
- Phase 1 (60% time): Initial learning + comprehension
- Phase 2 (30% time): Spaced review + retrieval practice
- Phase 3 (10% time): Mock exams + weak area focus
- Use: Professional certifications, academic finals, bar exam
Language Learning (ongoing):
- Daily: 10 new vocabulary words + review old words due today
- Weekly: Grammar lesson + interleaved practice with prior lessons
- Monthly: Conversation practice integrating all learned material
- Use: Spanish, Mandarin, French, any language mastery
Technology/Job Skill (3-12 weeks):
- Week 1-2: Fundamentals + hands-on practice
- Week 3-6: Advanced concepts + spaced review of fundamentals
- Week 7+: Real projects + systematic review of challenging concepts
- Use: Learning Python, React, AWS, data analysis
Medical/Technical Procedures:
- Day 1: Learn procedure steps + immediate practice
- Day 2: Retrieval practice without notes
- Day 4: Practice + add edge cases
- Day 8: Full simulation
- Day 15, 30: Refresh to maintain
- Use: Clinical skills, safety protocols, lab techniques
Bulk Memorization (facts, dates, lists):
- Create spaced repetition flashcard deck
- Review cards daily (Anki algorithm or similar)
- Retire cards after 5+ successful recalls
- Add mnemonic devices for difficult items
- Use: Anatomy, geography, historical dates, pharmacology
Guardrails
Avoid Common Mistakes:
- ❌ Passive re-reading or highlighting → Use active retrieval instead
- ❌ Cramming (massed practice) → Use spaced repetition
- ❌ Blocking by topic (all topic A, then all topic B) → Use interleaving
- ❌ Over-confidence after initial learning → Test yourself repeatedly
- ❌ No tracking → Measure retention to adjust schedule
Realistic Expectations:
- Forgetting is normal and necessary for strong memory consolidation
- Initial struggles with retrieval are productive ("desirable difficulties")
- Expect 20-40% forgetting between reviews (that's the sweet spot)
- Spaced repetition feels less productive than massing, but works better
- Plan for 2-3x more time than you think you need
Time Management:
- Daily consistency > marathon sessions
- Minimum 15-20 min/day more effective than 2 hours weekly
- Peak retention: 25 min study → 5 min break → repeat
- Review sessions should be shorter than initial learning sessions
- Build buffer for life interruptions (illness, travel, deadlines)
When to Seek Help:
- Material isn't making sense after 3+ attempts → Get instructor/expert help
- Retention remains below 60% after 3 review cycles → Reassess study method
- Burnout or motivation collapse → Reduce daily load, add intrinsic rewards
- Test anxiety interfering → Address anxiety separately from memory techniques
Quick Reference
Resources:
resources/template.md- Learning plan template with schedulingresources/methodology.md- Advanced techniques for complex learning goalsresources/evaluators/rubric_memory_retrieval_learning.json- Quality criteria
Output:
- File:
memory-retrieval-learning.mdin current directory - Contains: Learning goals, material breakdown, review schedule, retrieval methods, tracking system
Success Criteria:
- Spaced repetition schedule covers entire timeline
- Retrieval practice methods defined for all material types
- Daily time commitment is realistic and sustainable
- Tracking mechanism in place to measure retention
- Schedule includes buffer for setbacks
- Validated against quality rubric (score ≥ 3.5)
Evidence-Based Techniques:
- Spacing Effect: Reviews at 1, 3, 7, 14, 30 days
- Testing Effect: Self-test > re-study for long-term retention
- Interleaving: ABCABC > AAABBBCCC for transfer and discrimination
- Elaboration: Connect to prior knowledge, explain to others
- Dual Coding: Combine verbal + visual representations