AI Roundtable Poll · 4 models
勉強で一番大切なことは数理社は問題演習、国は間違えた理由を考え次解く時に生かすこと、英は暗記(夜に英単語)と文法を理解することですか?
Result: Unanimous — Yes (4/4 votes)
Options
- Yes (4 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Yes
はい。提示された内容は、主要教科の学習法としてとても本質的です。 数理社は、知識を読むだけでなく問題演習を通して使える形にすることが重要です。特に数学は演習量が理解の定着に直結し、理科・社会も問題を解くことで知識の抜けや理解不足が見えます。 国語で「間違えた理由を考える」のも非常に大切です。正解を覚えるだけでなく、なぜ誤読したのか、設問のどこを読み落としたのかを分析すると、次に同じミスを防げます。 英語も、単語暗記と文法理解は土台です。夜に英単語を覚える方法自体も有効ですが、より重要なのは継続して反復することです。文法を理解していれば、読解・英作文・テスト全般に応用できます。 もちろん「一番大切なこと」は人によって多少異なりますが、挙げられている方針は全体として非常に妥当で、勉強の核になる考え方だと言えます。
Claude Opus 4
Vote: Yes
The question asks whether the most important things in studying are: for math/science, doing problem exercises; for Japanese/social studies, thinking about why you got things wrong and applying that when solving the next problem; and for English, memorization (vocabulary at night) and understanding grammar. These are all well-established and effective study strategies that align with common educational advice. Problem practice is fundamental for math and science, learning from mistakes is crucial for humanities subjects, and vocabulary memorization combined with grammar understanding is key for English learning. Therefore, the answer is Yes.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
The proposed study method accurately identifies the most effective core strategies tailored to the unique characteristics of each academic subject. For Math, Science, and Social Studies, active recall and pattern recognition are essential. Extensive problem practice allows students to test their understanding, identify knowledge gaps, and internalize formulas or historical facts far more efficiently than passive reading. Japanese (National Language) focuses primarily on reading comprehension and logical deduction. Simply solving numerous problems without reflection will not improve scores. Deeply analyzing the exact reason for a mistake and understanding the logical flow that leads to the correct answer is the most reliable way to build reading proficiency. English, as a second language, requires a strong structural foundation. Memorizing vocabulary—especially at night, since sleep is scientifically proven to consolidate memory—and fundamentally understanding grammar rules are the absolute prerequisites before advancing to complex reading or listening exercises. Because this subject-by-subject approach aligns perfectly with cognitive science and proven educational methodologies, it is highly accurate.
Grok 4.20
Vote: Yes
The described methods target core skills per subject effectively. Math, science, and social studies demand repetitive problem-solving to build fluency and pattern recognition. In kokugo, analyzing why an error occurred and applying that insight directly improves accuracy on future questions, turning weaknesses into strengths. English benefits from nightly vocabulary memorization for better retention via sleep consolidation, paired with grammar comprehension to enable practical use. These are foundational and subject-specific priorities for efficient studying.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable achieved a rare moment of total academic harmony, with all four models providing a unanimous 'Yes' to this specific study methodology. Gemini 3.1 Pro and Grok 4.20 both leaned on cognitive science to defend the strategy, specifically highlighting how nightly vocabulary memorization leverages sleep-based memory consolidation. GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4 focused on the practical necessity of transitioning from passive reading to 'usable knowledge' through active problem-solving and error analysis.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 4
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: This subject-specific approach aligns perfectly with cognitive science, utilizing active recall for math/science, logical deduction for Japanese, and sleep-facilitated memory consolidation for English vocabulary.