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— by mindflash
Employee trainingLearning and developmentLearning developmentThinking back, you can probably recall a class in school where you were always a couple of steps behind the teacher’s lecture. Or perhaps you’ve read a book that was so dense, you struggled to keep up with the plot.
It wasn’t until you reviewed the notes from the lecture or reread a few pages of the book that a clear picture formed. In a perfect world, things would click right away but that is not how the memory works. Information needs to be learned, or more accurately “processed.” And the human brain can only process a few pieces of information at a time.
In psychology, this concept is known as Cognitive Load Theory. In this article, you’ll learn what this theory entails and how you can create a training program that doesn’t overwhelm your employees.
When we’re trying to learn something new, the goal is to imprint it in the long-term memory. Once it’s there, we can recall it at any time.
But first, that information must pass through two other stages in the brain—the sensory memory and working memory.
Sensory memory
The sensory memory is the gatekeeper for the rest of the brain. Everything we experience in life must get through this filter or it exits the memory, forever to be forgotten.
Think about when you get home in the evening and sit down to relax. As you recap the day, you can recall the important events (e.g. the meeting with your boss) and a few other interesting highlights (e.g. the funny billboard you saw on the drive home).
But, of course, the day is not a movie you can replay in your mind. That’s because the unnecessary details have been removed by the sensory memory.
Working memory
The working memory acts as a tighter filter and a staging area for the long-term memory. It’s here that Cognitive Load Theory really comes into play.
This second step can hold about 5-10 distinct pieces of information so only important memories make it through (bye, bye funny billboard). However, new experiences, ideas, or complicated concepts are not immediately processed into the long-term memory. We need to learn them through repetition, examples we can relate to, or breaking the idea into smaller “chunks” that complete the puzzle.
The takeaway here is you can’t overload the working memory with too many complex ideas at once. And the few we can take in must be hammered home before we can move onto the next one.
Long-term memory
Once a concept clears the working memory, it’s learned and processed into the long-term memory. Here it is categorized so we can quickly access it when we need it.
Our long-term memories are full of knowledge we slowly acquired over time and can act on when we need to.
It’s easy for a new concept to pass the sensory memory. The hard part is getting it through the working memory to the long-term memory. Clearing that hurdle requires effective learning techniques.
Let’s explore how you can create an employee training program that reduces cognitive load:
Understanding Cognitive Load Theory and how our minds process information will help you avoid typical employee training pitfalls. Follow these tips and you’ll find your employees have no problem learning the knowledge they need to excel at their work.
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