---
title: "Retrieval Practice — AP Psychology Definition & Exam Guide"
description: "Retrieval practice is pulling information out of memory repeatedly to strengthen it. Learn how the testing effect and metacognition show up in AP Psych Unit 2."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/retrieval-practice"
type: "key-term"
subject: "AP Psychology"
unit: "Unit 2"
---

# Retrieval Practice — AP Psychology Definition & Exam Guide

## Definition

Retrieval practice is the strategy of repeatedly pulling information out of memory (instead of just re-reading it), which strengthens the memory trace and makes future retrieval more likely. In AP Psych, it includes the testing effect and metacognition (Topic 2.6, Unit 2).

## What It Is

Retrieval practice is the act of deliberately getting information OUT of your memory, over and over, to make it stick. Every time you successfully [recall](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/recall "fv-autolink") something, you strengthen the pathway to that memory and make the next retrieval easier. That's why quizzing yourself beats re-reading your notes, even though re-reading *feels* easier.

The CED ties retrieval practice to two specific processes. The **[testing effect](/ap-psych-revised/unit-2/6-retrieving-memories/study-guide/fbgbPlf4G5r8b52K "fv-autolink")** is the finding that taking a test (or self-quizzing) on material improves long-term retention more than spending the same time restudying it. **Metacognition** is thinking about your own thinking, like judging which [concepts](/ap-psych-revised/unit-2/2-thinking-problem-solving-judgments-and-decision-making/study-guide/gHqqU9CdMYyy4lPn "fv-autolink") you actually know versus which ones you only recognize. Together they explain why a student who works through practice questions and honestly tracks what they got wrong will outperform a student who highlighted the textbook three times. The effort of retrieval is the point. If recall feels a little hard, that "desirable difficulty" is exactly what builds durable memory.

## Why It Matters

Retrieval practice lives in **Topic 2.6 (Retrieving Memories)** in **[Unit 2](/ap-psych-revised/unit-2 "fv-autolink"): Cognition**, under learning objective **2.6.A**: explain how [memory retrieval](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/memory-retrieval "fv-autolink") processes get information out of memory. The essential knowledge states it directly: successful retrieval is more likely when using retrieval practice processes, including the testing effect and metacognition. That makes this one of the few terms where the CED is literally telling you how to study for the AP exam itself. It also sits alongside the other retrieval boosters in 2.6 (context-dependent, mood-congruent, and state-dependent memory), so you should be able to tell them apart in a scenario question. Retrieval practice is a *strategy you choose*; the others are *conditions that happen to match* between encoding and retrieval.

## Connections

### Testing Effect (Unit 2)

The testing effect is the core mechanism inside retrieval practice. Quizzing yourself is retrieval practice in action, and the improved long-term retention you get from it is the testing effect. If an MCQ describes a teacher giving frequent low-stakes quizzes, that's the answer they want.

### [State-Dependent Memory (Unit 2)](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/state-dependent-memory)

Both improve [retrieval](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/retrieval "fv-autolink"), but in different ways. State-dependent memory works because your physical state at retrieval matches your state at encoding, like an athlete shooting free throws with the same racing heart they had in practice. Retrieval practice works because you actively pulled the memory out before. One is a matching condition, the other is a deliberate strategy.

### Recall vs. Recognition (Unit 2)

Retrieval practice is strongest when it forces recall (remembering with no cues, like a blank flashcard) rather than recognition (picking the answer from options, like a photo lineup). That's why minimal-prompt flashcards beat multiple-choice review for building memory.

### [Metacognition (Unit 2)](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/metacognition)

[Metacognition](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/metacognition "fv-autolink") is the self-monitoring half of retrieval practice. When you explain a concept without notes and then check where you went wrong, you're using metacognition to find the gaps that recognition-based studying hides from you.

## On the AP Exam

This term shows up almost exclusively in scenario-based multiple-choice questions. The stem describes a study behavior and asks you to name the memory strategy. Watch for scenarios like a professor having students explain concepts to classmates without notes and then correct misunderstandings, or a student making deliberately hard flashcards with minimal prompts and spacing sessions over several days. Both are retrieval practice. Your job is to (1) identify retrieval practice versus a matching effect like state-dependent or context-dependent memory, and (2) explain *why* it works (active retrieval strengthens memory more than passive review). No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but the Article Analysis Question (AAQ) frequently draws on memory research, and retrieval practice studies are classic material for it, so be ready to identify it as an independent variable or explain its effect on retention.

## retrieval practice vs Testing effect

These overlap so much that students treat them as identical, but there's a clean way to keep them straight. Retrieval practice is the broader *behavior*: any repeated act of pulling information from memory, including self-quizzing, flashcards, and explaining without notes. The testing effect is the specific *finding* that testing yourself produces better long-term retention than restudying. The CED lists the testing effect (along with metacognition) as a process *within* retrieval practice. So if a question asks what the student is doing, say retrieval practice; if it asks why it works better than re-reading, name the testing effect.

## Key Takeaways

- Retrieval practice means repeatedly pulling information out of memory, which strengthens it and makes future retrieval more likely.
- The CED lists two retrieval practice processes under LO 2.6.A: the testing effect and metacognition.
- The testing effect is the finding that self-testing produces better long-term retention than spending the same time re-reading or restudying.
- Retrieval practice is a deliberate strategy, while context-dependent, mood-congruent, and state-dependent memory are matching conditions between encoding and retrieval.
- Retrieval practice that forces recall (no cues, like blank flashcards) builds stronger memories than practice that only requires recognition.
- Harder retrieval helps more, so minimal prompts and spaced-out sessions beat easy, crammed review.

## FAQs

### What is retrieval practice in AP Psychology?

Retrieval practice is the strategy of repeatedly recalling information from memory, like self-quizzing or explaining concepts without notes, which strengthens the memory and improves long-term retention. It's tested under Topic 2.6 (Retrieving Memories) in Unit 2.

### Is retrieval practice the same as the testing effect?

Not exactly. Retrieval practice is the broad behavior of pulling information from memory, while the testing effect is the specific research finding that testing yourself beats restudying for long-term retention. The CED treats the testing effect as one process within retrieval practice, alongside metacognition.

### Does re-reading your notes count as retrieval practice?

No. Re-reading is passive review, and the memory just sits there while you look at it. Retrieval practice requires actively producing the information from memory, like covering your notes and reciting, using flashcards, or taking a practice test.

### How is retrieval practice different from state-dependent memory?

Retrieval practice is a strategy you choose, while [state-dependent memory](/ap-psych-revised/key-terms/state-dependent-memory "fv-autolink") is a boost that happens when your physical state at retrieval matches your state at encoding (like a nervous athlete performing well under the same nerves they practiced with). Both improve retrieval, but only one is something you deliberately do while studying.

### Why do hard flashcards work better than easy ones?

Effortful retrieval strengthens memory more than easy retrieval, so flashcards with minimal prompts force genuine recall instead of recognition. Pairing that difficulty with spaced sessions over several days, rather than cramming, is exactly the kind of effective retrieval practice AP Psych questions describe.

## Related Study Guides

- [2.6 Retrieving Memories](/ap-psych-revised/unit-2/6-retrieving-memories/study-guide/fbgbPlf4G5r8b52K)

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