Bad Grades? Could be Faulty Memory
The article below was very interesting. Wonder if the ‘faulty memory’ could be connected to this seemingly unrelated story
As many as 10 percent of school age children may suffer from poor working memory, British researchers said in a report last week, yet the problem remains rarely identified.
“You can think of working memory as a pure measure of your child’s potential,” Dr. Tracey Alloway of Britain’s Durham University said in a telephone interview.
“Some psychologists consider working memory to be the new IQ because we find that working memory is the single most important predictor of learning,” Alloway said.
Many children with poor working memory are considered lazy or dim. But Alloway said with early identification and memory training, many of these underachievers can improve.
Working memory allows people to hold and manipulate a few items in their minds, such as a telephone number. Alloway compares working memory to a box.
For adults, the basic box size is thought to be three to five items. People who have more than that on a mental grocery list are likely to forget something.
“Since there is this limit, it is important to put in the right thing. Irrelevant information will clutter up working memory,” Nelson Cowan, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Missouri, said in a telephone interview.
The question many researchers are struggling with is how to help people with this problem, which appears to be closely tied with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.
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Memory training may help improve working memory. “The claims that are being made are that all of the attention-related aspects of processing and working memory can be trained,” Cowan said.
Alloway’s tool for teachers to assess working memory capacity in children as early as age 4 has been used in 35 schools across Britain.
Levine’s institute trains teachers through a program called Schools Attuned, which is working with several thousand schools across the United States, Canada and Europe.
While he is not sure working memory can be expanded, Levine said children can be taught ways to function better in school.
For the girl with the reading problem, Levine’s solution was for her to own a set of school books so she could underline key points when she reads. Then she can read those points into a digital tape recorder and play them back.
“While it did not fix her problem, it prevents it from causing too much trouble,” he said. “She was very interested because she was telling her mother she was the stupidest kid in her class.
“Now she’s telling people, ‘I’ve got to work on expanding my active working memory,”‘ he said.
Filed under: Children's Issues




Salaam,
I’ve been working in the field of auditory neuroscience for the past few months, and insha’Allah will be continuing this work for my thesis…from what I’ve read in scientific papers and from discussions with my advisor, I’m not entirely sure this is new or groundbreaking news (as far as working memory being an indicator of school performance).
As the doctor said, even if working memory cannot be expanded, there are hopefully other ways which educators can focus on teaching these children effectively. I haven’t picked a thesis topic yet, but maybe this would be something I could focus on.
Salaam.