TechWhirl (TECHWR-L) is a resource for technical writing and technical communications professionals of all experience levels and in all industries to share their experiences and acquire information.
For two decades, technical communicators have turned to TechWhirl to ask and answer questions about the always-changing world of technical communications, such as tools, skills, career paths, methodologies, and emerging industries. The TechWhirl Archives and magazine, created for, by and about technical writers, offer a wealth of knowledge to everyone with an interest in any aspect of technical communications.
I have been watching the debate on the term chunking. Although I love the input from Australia, I would like to point out that chunking is a jargon term.
In my teaching background, I have seen chunking referred to several ways: memory, information acquisition, teaching styles and testing strategies. All of these have one idea in common: link information together in a logical format to reduce the amount of relative links the brain must take to reach the information.
Short term memory can hold 7 (approx) items. These items can be anything (dog, cat, blue, apple, e=mc2) but they are one concept (usually expressed in a word since we "think" in words). Chunking is the task of taking items/concepts and linking them in a way that they become related and reduced.
For example: You want to remember a shopping list. Your grocery list includes: lettuce, ground hamburger, mustard, bread, tomatoes, mayo, ice cream, soda pop, chocolate syrup, carrots. Now the same list using the principle of chunking:
salad - Your brain thinks, "Ok, what is in a salad?" You remember: lettuce, tomatoes, mayo, carrots
hamburgers - What is a hamburger? ground meat, tomatoes, lettuce, mustard, bread
sundaes - What is in a sundae? ice cream, chocolate syrup
This is a simplified example, and you might prefer mayo on your hamburger or carmel on your ice cream, but the idea is the same.