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Graduated Interval Recall is a complex name
for a very simple theory about memory. No aspect of learning
a foreign language is more important than memory, yet before
Dr. Pimsleur's work, no one had explored more effective ways
for building language memory.
In his research, Dr. Pimsleur discovered how long students
remembered new information and at what intervals they needed
to be reminded of it. If reminded too soon or too late, they
failed to retain the information. This discovery enabled him
to create a schedule of exactly when and how the information
should be reintroduced.
Suppose you learn a new word. You tell yourself to remember
it, but after five minutes you can't recall it. If you'd been
reminded of it after five seconds, you probably would have
remembered it for maybe a minute -- then you would have needed
another reminder. Each time you are reminded, you remember
the word longer than you did the time before. The intervals
between reminders become longer and longer, until you eventually
remember the word without being reminded at all.
This program is designed to remind you of new information
at the exact intervals where maximum retention takes place.
Each time your memory begins to fade, you will be asked to
recall the word. Through this powerful method, you progress
from short-term to long-term memory without being aware of
it, while avoiding the monotonous rote repetition used in
traditional language courses.
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