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In this episode of the Structured Literacy podcast, Jocelyn explores the cognitive science concept of primacy and recency, first researched by Hermann Ebbinghaus in the 1880s, which reveals that students best remember information presented at the beginning and end of lessons while content in the middle often gets lost. She explains how teachers can maximise these "prime time" windows by explicitly teaching critical concepts at lesson starts rather than asking students to discover unknown information, breaking longer sessions into 20-30 minute segments with clear transitions, and reserving lesson endings for consolidation and summarising activities.
Jocelyn warns against common mistakes that waste prime time, such as starting lessons with housekeeping tasks or having students guess at concepts they haven't been taught, and provides practical reflection questions to help educators structure instruction according to how students' brains actually process and retain information.
Has something in this episode resonated with you? Get in touch!
We have released Spelling Success in Action 1, a catch-up program for phonics, early morphology, and orthographic conventions for years 3 to 8. This program can be used one-on-one, in small groups, or as a whole class and is built on what the evidence tells us is the critical knowledge students need for strong spelling and the type of instruction that makes learning stick.
Learn more about this resource and order your copy at www.jocelynseamereducation.com
Quick Links
Jocelyn Seamer Education Homepage
The Resource Room
Youtube channel
Facebook Page
#jocelynseamereducation #literacy #bestpractice #earlyprimaryyears #primaryschool #primaryschools #primaryschoolteacher #earlyyearseducation #earlyyearseducator #structuredliteracy #scienceofreading #classroom #learning #learningisfun #studentsuccess #studentsupport #teacherlife #theresourceroom #theevergreenteacher #upperprimary #upperprimaryteacher #thestructuredliteracypodcast #phoneme #grapheme #phonics #syntheticphonics
By Jocelyn Seamer4.2
55 ratings
In this episode of the Structured Literacy podcast, Jocelyn explores the cognitive science concept of primacy and recency, first researched by Hermann Ebbinghaus in the 1880s, which reveals that students best remember information presented at the beginning and end of lessons while content in the middle often gets lost. She explains how teachers can maximise these "prime time" windows by explicitly teaching critical concepts at lesson starts rather than asking students to discover unknown information, breaking longer sessions into 20-30 minute segments with clear transitions, and reserving lesson endings for consolidation and summarising activities.
Jocelyn warns against common mistakes that waste prime time, such as starting lessons with housekeeping tasks or having students guess at concepts they haven't been taught, and provides practical reflection questions to help educators structure instruction according to how students' brains actually process and retain information.
Has something in this episode resonated with you? Get in touch!
We have released Spelling Success in Action 1, a catch-up program for phonics, early morphology, and orthographic conventions for years 3 to 8. This program can be used one-on-one, in small groups, or as a whole class and is built on what the evidence tells us is the critical knowledge students need for strong spelling and the type of instruction that makes learning stick.
Learn more about this resource and order your copy at www.jocelynseamereducation.com
Quick Links
Jocelyn Seamer Education Homepage
The Resource Room
Youtube channel
Facebook Page
#jocelynseamereducation #literacy #bestpractice #earlyprimaryyears #primaryschool #primaryschools #primaryschoolteacher #earlyyearseducation #earlyyearseducator #structuredliteracy #scienceofreading #classroom #learning #learningisfun #studentsuccess #studentsupport #teacherlife #theresourceroom #theevergreenteacher #upperprimary #upperprimaryteacher #thestructuredliteracypodcast #phoneme #grapheme #phonics #syntheticphonics

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