Metadata
Title
Active learning
Category
general
UUID
70fbb63bc17e4f5f892397f07d168e4c
Source URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/key-study-skills/active-learning/
Parent URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:22:09+00:00
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Active learning

Source: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/key-study-skills/active-learning/ Parent: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/

  1. Home  » 2. Key study skills  » 3. Habits of mind

Active learning

The way that you engage with course content matters. Actively engaging in your learning is more powerful than passively receiving information.

Ka rongo ka wareware

Ka kite ka mahara

Ka hangaia ka marama ahau

I hear and I forget\ I see and I remember\ I do and I understand

What is passive learning?

Passive learning is when you receive information without interacting with it  or applying it. An example might be listening to a lecture or reading an article. It is often used when there is a large amount of disciplinary content to transfer at once. The problem with this style of passive transferral is that sometimes the information just doesn’t stick.

You may have noticed this as a particular problem at exam time. You can sometimes feel you are drowning in lecture notes when you start to revise.

What is active learning?

Active learning means taking information and critically engaging with it or applying it in meaningful ways. Your lecturers or tutors will use a number of active learning techniques such as practice quizzes, group discussions, playing games, getting you to apply information to real-world problems, or asking you to think about knowledge in terms of your own experiences and context.

Often tutorials are key places where active learning takes place. You will learn about something in a lecture and then be asked to apply it in a tutorial.

Active learning helps you make meaningful connections between difficult theories and concepts and their real-world applications. In active learning you drive your own understanding by engaging with, thinking critically about, or applying the knowledge you have acquired. This often means that knowledge sticks in a way it won’t with passive learning.

How to be an active learner

How to study actively

To study actively you need to critically engage with information you are receiving and then do something with it.

This might include:

Workshops

See all available workshops.

Short on time? Watch a video on:

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