Visual image | Associate a visual image with a word or name to help you remember them better. Positive, pleasant images that are vivid, colourful, and three-dimensional will be easier to remember. | To remember the name Rosa Parks and what she’s known for, picture a woman sitting on a park bench surrounded by roses, waiting as her bus pulls up. |
Acrostic (or sentence) | Make up a sentence in which the first letter of each word is part of or represents the initial of what you want to remember. | The sentence “Every good boy does fine” to memorize the lines of the treble clef, representing the notes E, G, B, D, and F. |
Acronym | An acronym is a word that is made up by taking the first letters of all the key words or ideas you need to remember and creating a new word out of them. | The word “HOMES” to remember the names of the Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior. |
Rhymes and alliteration | Rhymes, alliteration (a repeating sound or syllable), and even jokes are a memorable way to remember more mundane facts and figures. | The rhyme “Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November” to remember the months of the year with only 30 days in them. |
Chunking | Chunking breaks a long list of numbers or other types of information into smaller, more manageable chunks. | Remembering a 10-digit phone number by breaking it down into three sets of numbers: 555-867-5309 (as opposed to5558675309). |
Method of loci | Imagine placing the items you want to remember along a route you know well or in specific locations in a familiar room or building. | For a shopping list, imagine bananas in the entryway to your home, a puddle of milk in the middle of the sofa, eggs going up the stairs, and bread on your bed. |