The learning pyramid - Deepstash

The learning pyramid

The theory says that people remember 10 % of what they read, 20 % of what they hear, 30 % of what they see, 50 % of what they see and hear, 70 % of what they say and write, and 90 % of what they do or teach others.

This is never actually been proven and the percentages given are pure fiction.

2.12K

7.27K reads

CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

bri_

Sometimes the most important life lessons are the ones we end up learning the hard way.

The idea is part of this collection:

How To Give And Receive Constructive Criticism

Learn more about problemsolving with this collection

Understanding the importance of constructive criticism

How to receive constructive criticism positively

How to use constructive criticism to improve performance

Related collections

Similar ideas to The learning pyramid

The Principle of Normality

The Principle of Normality

A normal person says what others say, but does what others do.

The principle captures two distinct features of normality: conformism & the chasm between words and actions. Normal...

The SAFE Technique: Acknowledge

As your boss talks, actually listen and don't just think of a rebuttal. Ask open-ended questions to show you are engaged in the conversation.

  • Your questions are a paraphrase of what your boss says. "I hear you say X, which to me sounds like Y. Is that correct?"
  • ...

Learning the right way

The goal of effective note-taking is to remember what you learned.

  • It involves active learning, meaning the student is responsible for doing things with the material, such as reading, writing, discussing, and solving problems.
  • ...

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates