Volume 32, Issue 3
SHORT PAPER ‐ 5000 WORDS OR LESS

The learning benefits of teaching: A retrieval practice hypothesis

Aloysius Wei Lun Koh

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore

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Sze Chi Lee

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore

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Stephen Wee Hun Lim

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: psylimwh@nus.edu.sg

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Correspondence

Stephen Wee Hun Lim, PhD, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, Block AS4, Level 2, 9 Arts Link, Singapore 117570.

Email: psylimwh@nus.edu.sg

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First published: 15 April 2018
Citations: 5

Summary

Teaching educational materials to others enhances the teacher's own learning of those to‐be‐taught materials, although the underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, we show that the learning‐by‐teaching benefit is possibly a retrieval benefit. Learners (a) solved arithmetic problems (i.e., they neither taught nor retrieved; control group), (b) taught without relying on teaching notes (i.e., they had to retrieve the materials while teaching; teaching group), (c) taught with teaching notes (i.e., they did not retrieve the materials while teaching; teaching without retrieval practice [TnRP] group), or (d) retrieved (i.e., they did not teach but only practised retrieving; retrieval practice group). In a final comprehension test 1 week later, learners in the teaching group, as did those in the retrieval practice group, outperformed learners in the TnRP and control groups. Retrieval practice possibly causes the learning benefits of teaching.

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