Rehearsal

Rehearsal

Rehearsal

Mental activities associated with committing information to memory.

Rehearsal is a term used by memory researchers to refer to mental techniques for helping us remember information. Its technical meaning is not very different from our everyday use of the term. Actors rehearse their lines so that they won't forget them. Similarly, if we want to retain information over time, there are strategies for enhancing future recall. There are two main types of rehearsal. The first is maintenance rehearsal, which involves continuously repeating the to-be-remembered material. This method is effective in maintaining information over the short term. We have all had the experience of looking up a phone number and subsequently forgetting it (or part of it) before we have dialed it. This illustrates the fact that new material will fade from memory relatively quickly unless we make a purposeful effort to remember it. One of the advantages of a touch tone telephone is that the number can be dialed more quickly compared to the old rotary dial phones, thereby reducing the length of time required to keep the number in memory. Maintenance rehearsal typically involves rote repetition, either out loud or covertly. It is effective for maintaining relatively small amounts in memory for brief periods, but is not likely to affect retention in the long term.

In order to retain information for longer periods of time, elaborative rehearsal is more useful. This second main type of rehearsal involves associating new material with information that already exists in long-term memory. There are numerous occasions on which students are required to remember large amounts of relatively complex informationcertainly more complex than a phone number. In these situations, reciting the information over and over again is not going to help commit it to memory. Such a strategy would be hopelessly inefficient and ineffective. Instead, elaboration strategies that engage the learner in understanding the material are helpful, both for storing information, and for retrieving it in the future. Elaboration can take a variety of forms. For example the learner can generate personal examples that help illustrate concepts or principles. Enriching the material by concentrating on its meaning not only makes it more understandable, it also helps establish potential pathways for subsequent retrieval. Study groups provide a context for elaborative rehearsal. Discussions or arguments about various topics will enrich the subject matter and add to its meaningfulness. The most effective studying techniques are those that enhance understanding. Trying to explain a concept to a friend is a good way of testing your own grasp of it, and at the same time engages you in a form of elaborative rehearsal.

Timothy Moore

Further Reading

Reisberg, D. Cognition: Exploring the science of the mind. New York: Norton & Co., 1997.

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Moore, Timothy. "Rehearsal." Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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Rehearsal

Rehearsal, session during which the director, his cast, and his technical staff work on a play, preparing it for presentation. We know nothing of rehearsals in the classical theatre, and little of those in the medieval, though players, particularly women unable to read, must have been taught their parts orally, and great skill was obviously needed to direct the large crowds demanded by the liturgical drama. Companies in later times were no doubt rehearsed by their leader, who was also the chief actor and often, as with Molière, the author of the play. A glimpse of Elizabethan actors in rehearsal is given in A Midsummer Night's Dream. In the days of the stock company, in England and elsewhere, there were very few rehearsals. New plays were merely gone through to check cues and settle entrances and exits. A newcomer in an old play was left to learn his way about by trial and error, while a visiting star walked through his lines and left the company to adapt itself to his acting during the actual performance. New managements constantly began their reforms with an endeavour to institute regular rehearsals, and some degree of co-ordination was finally achieved by the stage-manager, who eventually became the all-important stage Director of modern times. (See also AUDITION and IMPROVISATION.)

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PHYLLIS HARTNOLL and PETER FOUND. "Rehearsal." The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

PHYLLIS HARTNOLL and PETER FOUND. "Rehearsal." The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O79-Rehearsal.html

PHYLLIS HARTNOLL and PETER FOUND. "Rehearsal." The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre. 1996. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O79-Rehearsal.html

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rehearsal

re·hears·al / riˈhərsəl/ • n. a practice or trial performance of a play or other work for later public performance: rehearsals for the opera season. ∎  the action or process of rehearsing: I've had two weeks in rehearsal | [as adj.] a rehearsal room.

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"rehearsal." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"rehearsal." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O999-rehearsal.html

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rehearsal

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"rehearsal." Oxford Dictionary of Rhymes. 2007. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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