Stop passively re-reading your notes—it's one of the least effective ways to learn. The key is to build a system around active recall (pulling information out of your brain) and spaced repetition (reviewing just as you're about to forget).
There isn't one.
The whole idea of a single "best" study method is a myth. It's like asking for the "best" food—best for who? A marathon runner needs something different than a bodybuilder. You need something different than the person sitting next to you.
What you really need is a system that works for your brain. Most people get this backward. They focus on getting information in. The real work, the stuff that builds memory, is about getting it out.
Forget highlighting. Forget re-reading your notes until your eyes glaze over. Those are passive tricks that feel like work but don't build strong memories.
Effective learning is built on two things:
Active Recall: This just means forcing your brain to pull information out. Instead of looking at your notes, you close the book and ask, "What were the main points?" or try to explain the concept out loud. That struggle to remember is what builds connections in your brain. It's the mental version of lifting a weight. Re-reading is like watching someone else lift.
Spaced Repetition: Your brain is designed to forget things. It's a feature, not a bug—it keeps you from getting overloaded. Spaced repetition works with this forgetting curve. You review information right as you're about to forget it. This tells your brain, "Hey, this is important. Keep it."
Think of it like this: Active recall makes the brick. Spaced repetition is the mortar that locks it into the wall.
So, active recall and spaced repetition are the what. You still need a system for the how.
This is where techniques come in. The most famous is the Pomodoro Technique. It's dead simple: work in focused 25-minute sprints, with a 5-minute break in between. After four of these, you take a longer 15-30 minute break.
It works because it forces you to do one thing at a time. It also makes big tasks feel smaller. You're not trying to study for three hours straight; you're just doing 25 minutes of focused work.
I remember trying this for a statistics exam. I set a timer for 25 minutes and just worked on practice problems. In that one focused block, I got more done than in the entire hour of distracted "studying" before it. The five-minute break felt earned, and it was easy to dive back in for the next round.
You can have the best system in the world, but it won't work if you're studying on your bed with Netflix on. Your brain connects your environment to a task. If you only study at a specific desk, your brain starts to get into focus mode when you sit down there.
So eliminate distractions. Put your phone in another room. Block the websites that pull you away. You want to make it easier to focus than to get distracted.
And remember that consistency beats intensity. An hour of studying every day is way better than cramming for seven hours on a Sunday. It gives your brain the time it needs for spaced repetition to actually work.
It's the one you build yourself. It's a system, not a magic trick. Start with active recall and spaced repetition. Try a focusing technique like Pomodoro. Find a place where you can actually work. And then just do it, consistently. It’s less about one heroic cram session and more about the boring, effective work you do every day.
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