Elaboration

Explain new material in your own words and connect it to what you already know.

Why it works

Elaboration — restating an idea and tying it to existing knowledge — builds more retrieval paths to the new material, making it both better understood and easier to recall. Connecting new ideas to prior knowledge gives them a structure to attach to rather than floating in isolation. The richer the connections, the more durable and usable the memory.

How to do it

  1. After learning something, explain it in your own words as if teaching someone.
  2. Ask how it relates to what you already know and where else it might apply.
  3. Generate your own examples rather than only reusing the ones you were given.

Evidence

Elaborative encoding is well supported by the levels-of-processing tradition and related work: processing material for meaning and connection produces stronger memory than shallow, rote processing. (rct)

Elaboration must be accurate and relevant; connecting new material to wrong or unrelated knowledge can entrench misconceptions.

Sources

  • Craik & Tulving (1975), depth of processing and memory, J. Experimental Psychology: General

Common mistake

Memorizing facts in isolation without ever asking what they mean or how they connect, leaving brittle knowledge that cannot be applied or transferred.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach prompts you to explain and connect new ideas to your own situation, building the elaborative links that make learning durable and usable.

Start with IX Coach

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