HOW TO MEMORIZE BIRDS SONGS (AND ALMOST ANYTHING ELSE)
Following up on our first talk, we’ll first take another short “virtual” walk to discuss some more vocalizations from our eastern migrants and review some of the concepts we discussed.
Then we’ll tackle a really important skill: memorization. We will cover the science of memory and learning, and see what techniques have proven effective for all kinds of memorization tasks. We’ll then explore a simple 3-step memorization system that Tom has used many times to memorize 300 or more songs for a trip to a new country.
Presenter
Tom Stephenson
Author, Photographer
Tom Stephenson has been birding since he was a kid under the tutelage of Dr. Arthur Allen of Cornell University. His articles and photographs are in museums and many publications including Birding, Birdwatcher’s Digest, Handbook of the Birds and Handbook of the Mammals of the World, and Guide to the Birds of SE Brazil.
He has lectured and guided many groups across the US as well as in Asia, where he trained guides for the government of Bhutan. He has donated many recordings of African and Eastern Himalayan rarities and other species to Cornell’s Macaulay Library of Natural sounds.
He was on Zeiss’s digiscoping team for the World Series of Birding and in 2011 his team won the World Series Cape Island Cup.
Tom and team also hold the US record for a Photo Big Day, capturing 208 species on camera in a 24-hour period.
As a musician he played concerts and did studio work for many years, working with several Grammy and Academy Award winners as well as performing with members of the NY Philharmonic and the Philadelphia Orchestra. His clients included the Grateful Dead, Phil Collins and the FBI. He joined Roland Corporation in 1991, managed the recorder division, and retired recently as Director of Technology.
His latest book, The Warbler Guide, is published by Princeton University Press and recently won the National Outdoor Book Award. The Warbler Guide App won the 2015 Design Award for AAUP Book, Jacket and Journal Show. His recent app, BirdGenie, is a “shazam” for bird song.