A large-scale (n = 1323) survey of mnemonic recall, self-reported familiarity, cued explanation, and application by introductory statistics students was conducted at a large research university in the southeastern United States.The students were presented 14 mnemonics during the fall 2017 term.Different nonoverlapping cohorts of Kids Sunscreen students were asked at different time points to complete a survey about mnemonic use.At each time point, the students were asked to recall any mnemonic that they remembered, explain the mnemonic when cued, Connector Wire self-report their degree of familiarity, and apply the mnemonic.Of the 14 mnemonics, acronym-type mnemonics were recalled more frequently, but longer phrase-type mnemonics were explained and applied more often.
These findings suggest that instructors should provide scaffolding to move a student from recalling a mnemonic to using a mnemonic toward successful completion of the statistics problem at hand.