Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Memorising. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Memorising Quotes And Sayings by 90 Authors including Marcus Tullius Cicero,Nassim Nicholas Taleb,Barbara Oakley,Pope John Xxiii,Frank K. Sonnenberg for you to enjoy and share.
Memory is the receptacle and sheath of all knowledge
What I learned on my own I still remember
Attempting to recall the material you are trying to learn - retrieval practice - is far more effective than simply rereading the material.
Listen to everything, forget much, correct little.
Learning is less about memorizing facts and more about the ability to think.
In our endeavors to recall to memory something long forgotten, we often find ourselves upon the very verge of remembrance, without being able, in the end, to remember.
Forget what you've been taught so you can remember what you know.
The memory is a muscle, the more you use it, the stronger it gets.
Repetition is the key to real learning.
To cultivate the memory we should confide to it only what we understand and love: the rest is a useless burden; for simply to know by rote is not to know at all.
I write to remember. I read to forget.
I can never remember things I didn't understand in the first place.
When the remembering was done, the forgetting could begin.
Recalling, for me, is a great way of living, so not to forget.
If you repeat something enough times, you will learn it. That's how it works!
This is the best possible way to retain important details that you wish to remember in any unified field of knowledge, whether it be the field of economics, science, history, or any other
link them up with related items which you already know or wouldn't mind knowing.
As bad as we are at remembering names and phone numbers and word-for-word instructions from our colleagues, we have really exceptional visual and spatial memories.
What the hand does the mind remembers.
The sport of competitive memorizing is driven by a kind of arms race where every year somebody comes up with a new way to remember more stuff more quickly, and then the rest of the field has to play catch-up.
Remembering often is rehearsing what you want reality to be.
Luria's Mind of a Mnemonist.
Things you can get access to, you should never memorize.
The importance of repetition until automaticity cannot be overstated. Repetition is the key to learning.
Memory, the warder of the brain.
Practice, the master of all things.
You tell me, and I forget
You teach me, and I remember
You involve me, and I learn
A good memory is one trained to forget the trivial.
There's a lot of memorization that goes on in school. You memorize vocabulary words and all these sorts of things.
Memory: what wonders it performs in preserving and storing up things gone by - or rather, things that are
I finally understood that I didn't lack pen and paper but my own
memorizing mind. It had been given away with a hundred poems, called
rote learning, old-fashioned, backward, an enemy of creative thinking,
a great human gift disowned.
Memory is curated. All this paraphernalia you collect to ward off forgetting
The only way we could remember would be by constant re-reading, for knowledge unused tends to drop out of mind. Knowledge used does not need to be remembered; practice forms habits and habits make memory unnecessary. The rule is nothing; the application is everything.
Never memorise what you can look up in a book.
Write what should not be forgotten.
It is easy to create a memory, but it is almost impossible to forget.
In forgetting, they were trying to remember
Remembering is a great invention of the mind.
The lessons which I remember the longest are always the ones that are self-taught
Memory is the scaffolding upon which all mental life is constructed.
Don't forget! That is to say: remember - because remembering is so much more a psychotic activity than forgetting.
Many think of memory as rote learning, a linear stuffing of the brain with facts, where understanding is irrelevant. When you teach it properly, with imagination and association, understanding becomes a part of it.
Forgetting means remembering at an inconvenient time.
There is no substitute for attentive repetition.
The only thing more painful than being an active forgetter is to be an inert rememberer.
Can you make me remember the conventional way?
Begin with "I remember." Write lots of small memories. If you fall into one large memory, write that. Just keep going. Don't be concerned if the memory happened five seconds ago or five years ago.
A great many complimentary things have been said about the faculty of memory, and if you look in a good quotation book you will find them neatly arranged.
For all aspects of memory, keep yourself physically fit. My catchphrase is, 'Healthy mind, healthy body, healthy body, healthy mind.' Your memory needs oxygen as fuel, so why not feed it often?
We learn by observation, imitation and repetition.
I decided to make memorizing a part of my daily routine. Like flossing. Except I was actually going to do it.
When at last I learned forgetting, I learned it very quickly and all too well.
You can't learn from remembering. You can't learn from guessing. You can learn only from moving forward at the rate you are moved, as brightness into brightness.
I have to always remember, writing is really hard.
Memory is like a dog that lies down where it pleases.
Often in life we forget the things we should remember and remember the things we should forget.
The mind must be trained, rather than the memory.
Memory is like a long, dark street, illuminated at intervals in a light so bright that it shows up every detail. And then one plunges into the dark stretch again.
Recalling a memory is not like playing a tape recorder. It's a creative process.
But few students practice these strategies, and those who do will need more than encouragement if they are to practice them effectively: It turns out that even when students understand that retrieval practice is a superior strategy, they often fail to persist long enough to get the lasting benefit.
There's a difference between remembering and thinking,
Humans more easily remember or learn items when they are studied a few times over a long period of time (spaced presentation), rather than studied repeatedly in a short period of time.
Learning is just remembering slowly, like simmer coming to boil.
But the thing about remembering is that you don't forget.
The very effort to forget teaches us to remember.
It's like learning to ride a unicorn. You never forget.
I do remember, and then when I try to remember, I forget.
Memory is ... similar to anticipation: an instrument of simplification and selection.
Memory is funny. Once you hit a vein the problem is not how to remember but how to control the flow.
Remembering is organized for significance (not usefulness)
What you learn and discard you will forget but what you learn and engage in you will remember forever
Best way to learn is by reflecting and emulating.
I want to memorize the way your eyes clench shut and you bite down on your lip, so that I can sketch your expression from memory. I want to know the exact angle of the way your neck curves, and how many times your heart beats a minute. I want to know everything.
I've always been pretty good at remembering the details about certain things.
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
Memory ... is the diary that we all carry about with us.
You remember with what you are at the time you are remembering.
I learn by doing ... the same thing over and over and over again countless times.
Memory is a painter. Paintin's not important. The important thing is keepin' busy.
Even as I think of myself as a 'rememberer,' I also know my memory is probably doing all this work to reconstruct a narrative where I come off better.
Forgetting is the great secret of strong and creative lives.
Memory is everything. Without it we are nothing,
Memory is the diary we all carry about with us.
The mind thinks upon, processes, and remembers what the senses forget.
When learning use the present moment to FOCUS on comprehension bringing the information into the flesh.
Memory is a way of telling you what's important to you.
Memory is the binding foam of our mental life.
Read, but not to remember everything. Read because that 1% that you remember has the potential to change your life.
Remembering is easy. It's forgetting that's hard.
Always carry a notebook. And I mean always. The short-term memory only retains information for three minutes; unless it is committed to paper you can lose an idea for ever.
The body remembers, the bones remember, the joints remember, even the little finger remembers. Memory is lodged in pictures and feelings in the cells themselves. Like a sponge filled with water, anywhere the flesh is pressed, wrung, even touched lightly, a memory may flow out in a stream.
There are as many forms of memory as there are ways of perceiving, and every one of them is worth mining for inspiration.
Writing down call numbers with short pencils, searching up and down aisles that would turn dark when the timers on the lights expired. She recalls, visually, certain passages in the books she'd read. Which side of the book, where on the page.
Learn by reading, listening, observing, imitating, and emulating.
Memory is the scribe of the soul
When we remember something, we're taking bits and pieces of experience - sometimes from different times and places - and bringing it all together to construct what might feel like a recollection but is actually a construction.
I started to write things down, as a very young child, wanting to find a way to remember - to keep close, somehow - moments that made an impression on me.
Memory is the way we keep telling ourselves our stories - and telling other people a somewhat different version of our stories.
Memory is dialogic and arises not only from direct experience but from the intercourse of many minds.
Remembering. Forgetting. I'm not sure which is worse.
It is notorious that the memory strengthens as you lay burdens upon it, and becomes trustworthy as you trust it.