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Susan Kramer
BellaOnline's Learning Disabilities Editor

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Rhymes for Remembering

Remembering may be an issue in math and communication if you have learning disabilities. Add this to the thought that as we age our reflexes naturally become slower as do other bodily systems. That is what I was told at my 50 year check up when I complained about taking longer to remember facts, that in earlier years had come to mind instantly.

Here is a way I've found to learn and remember more efficiently:

Rhyming words or numbers into sentences or verses that make sense is one of my major helps. I've found I remember a sentence that makes sense much easier than a string of unrelated words. And if I need to remember several facts I make up a rhyme or rhyming poem that includes all the facts.

I've found that words or numbers made into a rhyme, helps most easily bring them to mind.

Get it! I just gave you an example of a sentence made into a rhyme for ease in remembering. Take any important fact or event you want to remember and create a little rhyming sentence to bring it back to memory most easily.

Now, I'm not a scientist, so can't tell you why rhyming helps in remembering, but standing back and looking on I see that I'm using a combination of different skills to remember a fact when creating a rhyme. It is sort of like reinforcing a seam in sewing by stitching an overlapping fold of fabric to create a French seam. I'm spending more time on the seam and securing it so it holds more strongly.

Here are some more examples of rhymes for remembering -

"My boss is Mrs. Jones
And about that
I'll make no bones."

"My friend is Janie Waters
She lives in a house
With spacious quarters."

"4 times 8 is 32
Remembering this
Won't make me blue."

"My house is number 35
About that
I will not jive."

These little rhymes help me remember those facts, without having to spend 5 minutes searching in my mind for the answer. And, there have been some very famous rhyming advertising jingles that still come to mind today. Rhyming works!

Article by Susan Kramer

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Content copyright © 2008 by Susan Kramer. All rights reserved.
This content was written by Susan Kramer. If you wish to use this content in any manner, you need written permission. Contact Susan Kramer for details.

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