Monday, 6 July 2026

Module 3: Memory

 


What Is Memory?

Memory is the process of learning, storing, and recalling information.

It allows us to remember experiences, learn new skills, and recognise people, places, and facts.


Three Memory Processes

1. Encoding

Encoding is the process of changing information into a form the brain can store.

Example:
Reading a new person's name and paying attention so you can remember it.


2. Storage

Storage is keeping information in the brain over time.

Some memories last only a few seconds, while others may last for many years.


3. Retrieval

Retrieval means bringing stored information back into your conscious mind.

Example:
Remembering the answer to a quiz question.


Three Stages of Memory

Sensory Memory

  • Holds information from our senses.

  • Lasts only a fraction of a second to a few seconds.

  • Helps us briefly process what we see, hear, smell, taste, and feel.


Short-Term (Working) Memory

  • Holds a small amount of information temporarily.

  • Usually lasts about 15–30 seconds without rehearsal.

  • Holds around 4–7 chunks of information.

Example:
Remembering a phone number long enough to dial it.


Long-Term Memory

  • Stores information for days, years, or even a lifetime.

  • Has a very large capacity.

  • Includes memories of facts, events, and skills.


Types of Long-Term Memory

Implicit (Procedural) Memory

Memory for skills and habits that happen automatically.

Examples:

  • Riding a bicycle

  • Swimming

  • Typing on a keyboard

  • Tying shoelaces


Explicit (Declarative) Memory

Memory that you can consciously remember and describe.

It has two main types.

Episodic Memory

Memory for personal experiences.

Examples:

  • Your first day at school

  • A birthday party

  • A family holiday

Semantic Memory

Memory for facts and general knowledge.

Examples:

  • Paris is the capital of France.

  • Water freezes at 0°C.

  • A triangle has three sides.


Important Brain Areas

Brain AreaMain Function
HippocampusForms and consolidates new long-term memories.
AmygdalaProcesses emotional memories.
CerebellumHelps with movement and procedural learning.
Basal GangliaSupports habits and procedural memory.
Prefrontal CortexWorking memory, attention, planning, and retrieval.

Types of Amnesia

Retrograde Amnesia

Difficulty remembering events that happened before a brain injury.

Anterograde Amnesia

Difficulty forming new long-term memories after a brain injury.


Memory Errors

Memory is not like a video recording.

Sometimes we remember things incorrectly.

Misinformation Effect

New information changes what we remember.

Source Misattribution

Remembering information but confusing where it came from.

Transience

Memories naturally become weaker over time.

Blocking

Knowing the information but being temporarily unable to remember it.

Example:

"It's on the tip of my tongue!"


Eyewitness Testimony

Eyewitness memories can sometimes be inaccurate.

People may:

  • Forget details

  • Be influenced by leading questions

  • Become confident about memories that are actually incorrect

For this reason, eyewitness testimony should be considered carefully.


Ways to Improve Memory

Chunking

Group information into meaningful units.

Example:

Remembering 149217761945 as:

1492 – 1776 – 1945


Elaborative Rehearsal

Connect new information to something you already know.


Mnemonics

Use rhymes, acronyms, or visual images.

Example:

"My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Noodles"

to remember the order of the planets.


Spaced Practice

Study over several shorter sessions instead of one long session.

This helps strengthen long-term memory.


Key Points to Remember

  • Memory has three processes: encoding, storage, and retrieval.

  • Information moves through sensory, short-term, and long-term memory.

  • Long-term memory includes procedural and declarative memory.

  • Declarative memory includes episodic and semantic memory.

  • Different brain areas have different roles in memory.

  • Memory can sometimes be inaccurate or influenced by outside information.

  • Chunking, rehearsal, mnemonics, and spaced practice all improve learning and memory.

Colour Blindness (Colour Vision Deficiency) – Level 1 Easy Read

 


What is Colour Blindness?

Colour blindness, also called colour vision deficiency, means a person has difficulty telling some colours apart.

Most people with colour blindness do not see the world only in black and white.

Instead, certain colours look very similar.


Why Does It Happen?

Inside the eye are special cells called cone cells.

These cone cells help us see different colours.

If one or more types of cone cells do not work normally, the brain has difficulty telling some colours apart.


Types of Colour Blindness

Red-Green Colour Blindness

This is the most common type.

People may find it difficult to tell the difference between:

  • Red and green

  • Brown and green

  • Some shades of orange


Blue-Yellow Colour Blindness

This type is much less common.

People may find it difficult to tell the difference between:

  • Blue and green

  • Yellow and pink or violet


Monochromacy

This is extremely rare.

People mainly see shades of:

  • Black

  • White

  • Grey


Everyday Life

People with colour blindness may sometimes find it difficult to:

  • Read colour-coded maps

  • Match clothing colours

  • Tell if meat is fully cooked

  • Read coloured charts or graphs

  • Recognise coloured lights and indicators

Many people develop their own ways of managing these situations.


Driving

People with colour blindness can often drive safely.

Many learn the position of traffic lights instead of relying only on the colours.

For example:

  • Red is usually at the top.

  • Green is usually at the bottom.


School and Work

Some activities can be more difficult when colours are used without labels.

Teachers and employers can help by:

  • Adding written labels

  • Using symbols as well as colours

  • Choosing high-contrast designs

  • Avoiding information that depends only on colour

These are examples of good accessible practice.


Can Glasses Help?

Some people find specially designed glasses helpful for certain types of colour vision deficiency.

These glasses do not cure colour blindness, but they may make some colours easier to distinguish for some people.


Living with Colour Blindness

Many people with colour blindness live full and independent lives.

They often develop strategies to recognise colours in everyday situations.

Colour blindness is usually not a barrier to most daily activities, although it may affect eligibility for some careers that require accurate colour vision.


Key Facts

✔ Colour blindness does not usually mean seeing only black and white.

✔ The most common type affects red and green colours.

✔ Many people adapt very well.

✔ Good design should never rely on colour alone to communicate important information.

Accessibility Tip

If you are creating learning materials, websites, or presentations:

  • Do not use colour alone to give important information.

  • Add words, symbols, patterns, or icons.

  • Make sure there is good contrast between colours.

  • Test your materials so they are easy for everyone to understand.

Albert Bandura (1925–2021)

 


Who Was Albert Bandura?

Albert Bandura was a Canadian-American psychologist and professor at Stanford University. He became one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century.

Bandura changed psychology by showing that people do not learn only through rewards and punishments. Instead, they also learn by watching other people.

He developed Social Learning Theory, later expanded into Social Cognitive Theory, and introduced the important concept of self-efficacy.


Bandura's Main Ideas

1. Observational Learning (Learning by Watching)

Bandura believed that people can learn simply by observing others.

We watch how people behave, remember what they do, and may copy that behaviour later.

People often learn from:

  • Parents

  • Brothers and sisters

  • Friends

  • Teachers

  • Celebrities

  • Social media influencers

  • Television and films

Example

A child watches their parent always saying "please" and "thank you."

The child begins using good manners without anyone directly teaching them.

This is called observational learning or modelling.


2. The Bobo Doll Experiment (1961)

Bandura became famous for the Bobo Doll Experiment.

What happened?

Children watched an adult interacting with a large inflatable toy called a Bobo doll.

Some children watched an adult:

  • Hit the doll

  • Kick the doll

  • Punch the doll

  • Shout aggressive words

Other children watched an adult behave calmly.

What did Bandura find?

Children who observed the aggressive adult were much more likely to copy the same aggressive behaviours.

Many even copied the exact words and actions they had seen.

Why was this important?

The experiment showed that children can learn behaviours simply by watching others—even without receiving rewards or punishments.

This challenged traditional behaviourist theories that believed learning only happened through reinforcement.


3. Self-Efficacy

Later in his career, Bandura introduced the idea of self-efficacy.

What is self-efficacy?

Self-efficacy is a person's belief that they can successfully complete a task or achieve a goal.

In simple words:

"I believe I can do this."

People with high self-efficacy are more likely to:

  • Keep trying

  • Solve problems

  • Learn from mistakes

  • Recover after setbacks

  • Feel confident

People with low self-efficacy may:

  • Give up easily

  • Avoid challenges

  • Feel anxious

  • Doubt themselves

  • Lose motivation

Example

Two students take the same maths test.

One thinks:

"This is difficult, but I'll keep trying."

The other thinks:

"I'll never understand this."

The first student has higher self-efficacy and is more likely to continue working until they improve.


4. Social Cognitive Theory

Bandura later expanded Social Learning Theory into Social Cognitive Theory.

He believed that behaviour is influenced by three factors working together.

These are:

  • Personal factors (thoughts, beliefs, feelings)

  • Behaviour (what we do)

  • Environment (people and situations around us)

Each factor influences the others continuously.

Example

A child believes they can read well (personal factor).

They enjoy reading more often (behaviour).

Teachers praise their reading and provide more books (environment).

This positive cycle helps improve reading skills even further.


Why Is Bandura Important?

Bandura helped psychologists understand that learning is much more than rewards and punishments.

His work has influenced:

  • Education

  • Psychology

  • Mental health treatment

  • Parenting

  • Sports coaching

  • Workplace training

  • Health promotion

His research explains why role models, teachers, parents, and media can have such a powerful influence on behaviour.


Everyday Examples

SituationBandura's Theory
A child copies a parent's manners.Observational learning
A teenager learns a dance from social media.Modelling
A student believes they can pass an exam after practising.Self-efficacy
A football player becomes more confident after successful training.Increased self-efficacy
A young person copies aggressive behaviour seen in a film or online.Observational learning

Key Points to Remember

  • Albert Bandura believed people learn by watching others.

  • This is called observational learning.

  • His famous Bobo Doll Experiment showed that children imitate behaviours they observe.

  • He introduced self-efficacy, which is the belief in your ability to succeed.

  • His Social Cognitive Theory explains that behaviour results from the interaction between personal thoughts, actions, and the environment.

  • Bandura's work transformed psychology and continues to influence education, healthcare, parenting, and many other fields today.

Sunday, 5 July 2026

A few points to refine

 


  • Saying "The brain's main job isn't to think—it's to run your body" reflects one influential view, especially from Lisa Feldman Barrett, but it shouldn't be presented as an accepted fact. A better way to say it is:

    "One modern theory suggests that one of the brain's most important jobs is to regulate the body and keep it alive while also supporting thinking, emotions, learning, and behaviour."

  • Likewise, the phrase "Thoughts are not always facts" is very useful, particularly in mental health and cognitive therapy, but it doesn't mean our thoughts are usually wrong. A clearer explanation is that our brains interpret information, and sometimes those interpretations can be inaccurate or influenced by past experiences.

With those small changes, this makes an excellent chapter that connects biology and psychology.


Your Brain: More Than Just Thinking

Level 1 – Easy Read

What Does Your Brain Do?

Many people think the brain's main job is thinking.

Thinking is important, but your brain does much more.

Your brain helps keep you alive every second of the day.

It helps control:

  • ❤️ Your heartbeat

  • 🌬️ Your breathing

  • 🌡️ Your body temperature

  • 🍎 Digestion

  • 😴 Sleep

  • 💪 Movement

  • 😊 Emotions

  • 🧠 Learning

  • 🩸 Hormones

  • 🛡️ Many systems that help keep your body working properly

Your brain is always working—even while you are asleep.


Your Brain Uses Energy

Your brain uses a lot of your body's energy.

It is always planning ahead.

It predicts what your body may need next.

For example:

  • Walking upstairs

  • Running for a bus

  • Eating lunch

  • Sleeping

  • Exercising

Your brain helps prepare your body for these activities.


Learning from Experience

Your brain learns from past experiences.

It looks for patterns.

These patterns help you:

  • Recognise faces.

  • Understand language.

  • Cross the road safely.

  • Learn new skills.

  • Avoid danger.

Most of the time, these predictions are helpful.

Sometimes, however, your brain may make mistakes or misinterpret a situation.


Thoughts Are Not Always Facts

We all have thoughts every day.

Some thoughts are accurate.

Some thoughts are not.

Sometimes our thoughts are influenced by:

  • Stress

  • Anxiety

  • Fear

  • Tiredness

  • Past experiences

This is why it can help to pause and ask:

"Is this thought definitely true, or could there be another explanation?"


Your Brain Can Learn New Ways

The brain can change throughout life.

This is called neuroplasticity.

When you practise something often, your brain strengthens those connections.

Examples include:

  • Learning to read.

  • Riding a bicycle.

  • Learning a new language.

  • Developing healthier habits.

  • Practising relaxation techniques.

Learning takes time and practice.


Looking After Your Brain

You can help keep your brain healthy by:

  • Getting enough sleep.

  • Eating a balanced diet.

  • Exercising regularly.

  • Managing stress.

  • Learning new things.

  • Spending time with other people.

  • Taking breaks when needed.

Healthy habits support both your brain and your body.


Remember

✔ Your brain helps keep your body alive.

✔ Your brain also helps you think, learn, remember, and solve problems.

✔ The brain learns from experience and looks for patterns.

✔ Thoughts are not always completely accurate.

✔ The brain can continue learning and changing throughout life through neuroplasticity.

Insight Learning

 


Level 1 – Easy Read

What Is Insight Learning?

Insight learning happens when the answer to a problem suddenly becomes clear.

People often call this an:

💡 "Aha!" moment

or

💡 "Eureka!" moment

Instead of solving the problem little by little, the solution suddenly "clicks."


Who Discovered Insight Learning?

German psychologist Wolfgang Köhler studied insight learning in the 1920s.

He was one of the early psychologists associated with Gestalt psychology.


Köhler's Chimpanzee Experiment

Köhler placed a banana where a chimpanzee could see it but could not reach it.

The chimpanzee looked around the room.

After thinking for a while, it suddenly realised it could:

  • Stack boxes.

  • Join two sticks together.

The chimpanzee used these ideas to reach the banana.

Köhler believed this showed that the chimpanzee solved the problem through insight rather than only by trial and error.


The Four Stages of Insight

1. Preparation

You look at the problem.

You think about possible solutions.


2. Incubation

You become stuck.

You take a break or think about something else.

Your brain continues working on the problem in the background.


3. Insight

Suddenly, the answer comes to you.

This is the "Aha!" moment.


4. Verification

You try your idea.

If it works, you have solved the problem.


Everyday Examples

Insight learning happens in everyday life.

For example:

  • Solving a difficult puzzle.

  • Working out a maths problem.

  • Finding your lost keys after suddenly remembering where you left them.

  • Discovering a new way to organise your work.

  • Understanding a lesson after thinking about it overnight.


Insight and Trial-and-Error Learning

Sometimes people solve problems by trying different ideas until one works.

This is called trial-and-error learning.

Other times, the solution appears suddenly.

This is insight learning.

Many real-life problems involve a combination of both approaches.


Why Is Insight Learning Important?

Insight learning shows that people do not always learn through rewards, punishment, or repeated practice.

Sometimes we use:

  • Thinking

  • Reasoning

  • Past experiences

  • Seeing a problem in a new way

These can lead to a sudden solution.


Remember

✔ Insight learning is a sudden understanding of a problem.

✔ It is often called an "Aha!" moment.

✔ Wolfgang Köhler studied insight learning in chimpanzees.

✔ Taking a short break can sometimes help you solve a difficult problem.

✔ People often use both insight and trial-and-error when solving problems.

Albert Bandura and the Bobo Doll Experiment

 


Level 1 – Easy Read

Who Was Albert Bandura?

Albert Bandura was a psychologist who studied how people learn by watching others.

He believed that children often copy the behaviour of adults around them.

This became known as Social Learning Theory or Observational Learning.


What Was the Bobo Doll?

The Bobo Doll was a large inflatable toy that stood back up after being knocked over.

Bandura used it to study how children learn behaviour.


The Experiment

Bandura invited 72 children, aged about 3 to 6 years, to take part.

The children were divided into three groups.

Group 1 – Aggressive Adult

The children watched an adult:

  • Hit the Bobo doll.

  • Kick the doll.

  • Strike it with a toy hammer.

  • Shout aggressive words.


Group 2 – Calm Adult

The children watched an adult who played quietly with other toys.

The adult ignored the Bobo doll.


Group 3 – Control Group

The children did not watch an adult model either aggressive or calm behaviour before playing.


What Happened Next?

The children were then allowed to play in a room containing many toys, including the Bobo doll.

Researchers observed what the children chose to do.


What Did the Researchers Find?

Children who had watched the aggressive adult were more likely to:

  • Hit the Bobo doll.

  • Kick the doll.

  • Use the toy hammer.

  • Copy some of the aggressive words they had heard.

This showed that children can learn behaviours by watching other people.


Why Is This Important?

Bandura's research showed that people can learn without receiving rewards or punishments themselves.

Instead, they can learn by observing others.

This is called observational learning or modelling.


Everyday Examples

Children may learn by watching:

  • Parents

  • Teachers

  • Brothers and sisters

  • Friends

  • Sports coaches

  • Television programmes

  • Films

  • Social media

  • Online videos

People can learn both positive and negative behaviours.


Positive Behaviour

Children may copy:

  • Kindness

  • Sharing

  • Good manners

  • Helping others

  • Respect

  • Honesty


Negative Behaviour

Children may also copy:

  • Hitting

  • Bullying

  • Swearing

  • Aggressive behaviour

  • Unsafe behaviour

This is one reason why positive role models are important.


What Are the Limits of the Study?

The Bobo Doll experiment was important, but it had some limitations.

For example:

  • Hitting an inflatable toy is not the same as hurting a real person.

  • Children knew they were taking part in an experiment.

  • Many factors influence behaviour, including family, friends, personality, and life experiences.

Because of this, the study suggests that observation can influence behaviour, but it does not mean that everyone who sees aggression will become aggressive.


Remember

✔ Children learn by watching other people.

✔ People can copy both positive and negative behaviours.

✔ Parents, teachers, carers, and other adults are important role models.

✔ Observational learning is one of the main ways people learn throughout life.

Psychology at a Glance

 


Lobotomies, Classical Conditioning and Operant Conditioning

Level 1 – Easy Read

Lobotomies (Psychosurgery)

A lobotomy was a type of brain surgery used mainly during the 1930s to the 1950s to treat some severe mental illnesses.

Doctors hoped the operation would reduce distress in people with conditions such as:

  • Schizophrenia

  • Severe depression

  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)

The procedure involved cutting or damaging connections in the frontal lobes of the brain.

At the time, doctors had very few effective treatments for severe mental illness, and some believed lobotomies might help.

Unfortunately, many people experienced serious side effects, including:

  • Personality changes

  • Memory problems

  • Loss of motivation

  • Difficulty making decisions

  • Emotional blunting

  • Permanent brain damage

Because of these risks, lobotomies were gradually abandoned as safer and more effective treatments became available.

Today, lobotomies are no longer used as a treatment for mental illness.


Classical Conditioning

Ivan Pavlov discovered classical conditioning.

This is learning through association.

Example

A dog naturally salivates when it sees food.

If a bell rings every time food is presented, the dog begins to associate the bell with food.

Eventually, the dog salivates when it hears the bell, even if no food is present.

This is called classical conditioning.


Operant Conditioning

B. F. Skinner developed operant conditioning.

This is learning through the consequences of behaviour.

Behaviours followed by rewarding consequences are more likely to happen again.

Behaviours followed by unpleasant consequences are less likely to happen again.


Skinner's Box

Skinner created a special piece of equipment called the Skinner Box.

Inside the box, a rat or pigeon learned that pressing a lever or pecking a key produced a reward, such as food.

Over time, the animal repeated the behaviour because it had learned the consequence.


Four Types of Operant Conditioning

Positive Reinforcement

Adding something pleasant to increase a behaviour.

Example:

A child receives praise for completing their homework.


Negative Reinforcement

Removing something unpleasant to increase a behaviour.

Example:

A seatbelt alarm stops when you fasten your seatbelt.


Positive Punishment

Adding something unpleasant to reduce a behaviour.

Example:

A student receives a warning after interrupting the lesson.


Negative Punishment

Taking away something enjoyable to reduce a behaviour.

Example:

A teenager loses gaming time after breaking a family rule.


Comparing the Two Types of Learning

Classical ConditioningOperant Conditioning
Learning through association.Learning through consequences.
Developed by Ivan Pavlov.Developed by B. F. Skinner.
Usually involves automatic responses.Usually involves voluntary behaviours.
Example: A dog salivates when it hears a bell.Example: A child studies because they receive praise.

Why Are These Theories Important?

These learning theories are still used today in:

  • Schools

  • Healthcare

  • Psychology

  • Animal training

  • Behaviour support

  • Parenting

  • Sports coaching

Understanding how people learn helps teachers, parents, carers, and health professionals support positive behaviour.


Remember

✔ Classical conditioning is learning through association.

✔ Operant conditioning is learning through consequences.

✔ Positive means adding something.

✔ Negative means removing something.

✔ Reinforcement increases behaviour.

✔ Punishment reduces behaviour.

✔ Lobotomies are no longer used because safer and more effective treatments are available today.

Module 3: Memory

  What Is Memory? Memory is the process of learning, storing, and recalling information. It allows us to remember experiences, learn new ski...