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Using Acronyms to Remember
Information
Forming an acronym is a good strategy to use to
remember information in any order that can be
remembered. An acronym is a word that is formed from
the first letter of each fact to be remembered. It
can be a real word or a nonsense word you are able
to pronounce.
Here is how to form an acronym.
Write the facts you need to remember.
Underline the first letter of each fact. If there is
more than one word in a fact, underline the first
letter of only the first word inthe fact.
Arrange the underlined letters to form an acronym
that is a real word oranonsense word you can
pronounce.
“HOMES” is an example of an acronym that is a real
word you can use to remember the names of the five
Great Lakes: Michigan, Erie, Superior, Ontario,
Huron: In HOMES, H is the first letter of Huron and
helps you remember that name; O is the first letter
of Ontario, and so on.
“Telk” is an acronym that can be used to remember
the following animals: tiger, lion, elephant,
kangaroo. “Telk” is not a real word, but you can
easily pronounce it. You could also have used “kelt”
as an acronym. Notice that in this example, you
cannot form a real word using the first letter of
each fact to be remembered.
Sometimes two or more of the facts you must remember
each begin with the same first letter. For example,
the acronym “capp” can be used to remember the
following fruits: pear, apple, peach, cherry. You
can use the first letter “p” in the acronym to
remember either “pear” or “peach” and the second
letter “p” to remember the other.
Use the acronym strategy as a way to remember
information.
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