Blog Post

Listening - A way of maximising learning

Kathryn Evans • 15 February 2019

Listen to readings and study notes and give yourself more time to learn.

Headphones on computer

We lead busy lives and finding time to study or learn a new skill can be difficult. Even full time students have other demands on their time such as working, travelling, going to the gym etc. If you are a part time student trying to fit in studies whilst working, bringing up a family and more its no wonder you struggle to find the time to study.

But if you could listen to your study materials you would have so much more time. You could listen whilst cooking the dinner, walking the dog, going to the gym or even on your daily commute. You could be listening to your study materials whilst standing on a packed bus, bustling around your kitchen or out for a run or on a treadmill at the gym. Think of all the extra studying time that would give you.

Overlearn
It would even give you the opportunity to overlearn material. Yes you can commit things to memory by overlearning them.

  • Overlearn (verb) to learn or memorise beyond the point of proficiency or immediate recall.
Imagine going into your next exam secure in the knowledge that you have learned everything so well that you can recall it as soon as you see the questions. Arriving at a lecture having actually completed ALL of the additional readings that were set. Or even sitting down to write an essay and having such great recall of the information you'd learned that it just flowed out. All of these can be possible if you start listening to readings and notes.

Using AT software
Students who have access to assistive technology get software such as Read & Write or Claro Read which will both read documents to them. Both of these pieces of AT can also convert documents to audio files to listen to at any time. This is where cloud storage comes in, if you upload an audio file to Google Drive, One Drive or iCloud then you can add the associated app to your phone and instantly have access to these files ON THE GO. Yep, just plug in your headphones and listen, or play through your cars audio system.

Cloud storage

What if I don't have AT Software?
The good news is you can still do it, its a little more complex to do it for free but it's possible. For under a tenner (£6.49) it gets a little easier.

www.ttsreader.com

The website is free and you can upload a file (txt, pdf or epub) then simply choose a voice and listen to it being read aloud. There is even a free Chrome extension that will allow TTS reader to read from websites. This is great if you have your computer to hand to listen but doesn't let you listen on the go.

If you want to make an audio file for free - leave your computer running and record as it reads using a recorder app on your computer of phone. This is a bit time consuming as you need to let the computer do all the reading whilst you record it.

If you buy the premium Chrome extension for £6.49 you can then download the audio files and add them to your cloud storage.

Give it a try and energise your learning by adding audio to your learning tools.

Screenshot of TTS Reader homepage
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