Ancient India the Vedic oral tradition or a system of oral memorization constituted one of the most elaborate of memorization systems in human history. Refined after many millennia, it guaranteed the immaculate transmission of the Vedas, complicated and vast collections of (Sanskrit) hymns that had been transmitted without writing. Mnemonic methods peculiar to this tradition, which are mentioned in the paper, concern accuracy in phonetics, rhythmical recitation, and nested recitation (pada-pātha, krama-pātha, jata-pātha, ghana-pātha), and concentration in meditation. Together with a mental asceticism, the Vedic scholars who performed with memory massive tasks, learning by memory tens of thousands of verses word to word, accent to accent. Modernly speaking, the techniques may be analyzed by the prism of cognitive science and reveal principles in accordance to current memory research: spaced repetition, chunking, multisensory encoding and incorporation of mindfulness in learning. This article explores the history of the Vedic oral system, examines its thinking process, and makes concrete recommendations to fit in the 21st century education. Its possibilities of use include language acquisition, attention building, long-range memorization and global teaching. The findings of the study help to manage with the idea that the spiritual aspect of the Vedic approach is heavily embedded in its culture but the essential techniques of it may be recontextualized in modern classrooms and provide the connection between an ancient wisdom and learning science.
Sala Besra (Wed,) studied this question.