Myth-bust common study tips that waste time, kill focus, and feel productive. Learn what actually helps you study smarter and build real habits.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think studying harder just meant doing more of the stuff adults kept recommending.
Make color-coded notes. Read the chapter three times. Highlight the whole page. Stay up late “grinding.”
And honestly? A lot of that was just busywork wearing a smart-looking hat.
I’ve wasted so many hours on study tips that felt productive but didn’t actually help me remember anything. The annoying part is that these tips get repeated so often, people start treating them like law.
So let’s talk about the study advice that sounds great but mostly doesn’t work — and what to do instead.
This one is the king of fake productivity.
You reread the same page five times and it feels familiar, so your brain goes, “Yep, we know this.” But familiarity is not the same thing as memory.
Reading is passive. Recall is active. If you can’t pull the info out without looking, you probably don’t know it well enough yet.
I used to reread my biology notes until my eyes blurred. Then I’d walk into the test and blank on the exact thing I had “studied” for two hours.
That last one matters. If it feels slightly annoying, you’re probably doing it right.
Nope. It mostly helps you make your notes look pretty.
I’m not anti-highlighter. I’m anti-highlighter-as-a-crutch.
If every line is neon yellow, then nothing stands out. And if you’re just coloring text while your brain zones out, you’re not learning — you’re decorating.
Highlighting can support studying, but it can’t replace it.
And if you can’t answer that question, don’t highlight it.
I used to wear long study sessions like a badge of honor.
Four hours at a desk. No breaks. Dead eyes. Zero movement. Very dramatic. Very ineffective.
Your brain isn’t a machine that runs better the longer you stare at a textbook. It gets tired, distracted, and weirdly creative about thinking of snacks, old conversations, and literally anything except chemistry.
Short, focused sessions beat marathon sessions almost every time.
And yes, break time matters. If you skip breaks, your brain starts charging interest.
This one’s a trap.
Music with lyrics. Phone open. Laptop tabs everywhere. Half studying, half chatting, half watching a video — somehow we keep trying to make three halves fit into one brain.
It doesn’t work.
Switching tasks kills concentration faster than you think. Every time you check your phone, your brain pays a little tax to get back into focus.
And if you keep “just checking one thing” every few minutes, be honest — you’re not multitasking. You’re leaking attention.
I mean, yes, it can get you through a quiz sometimes.
But as a long-term strategy? Terrible. Absolutely terrible.
Cramming is like stuffing clothes into a bag before a trip. Sure, it technically works. But everything’s wrinkled, half the stuff falls out, and you’re stressed the whole time.
Last-minute studying creates shallow memory. You might recognize the answer for a few hours, but it doesn’t stick.
This is where habit-building matters. If you make studying tiny and regular, it stops feeling like a giant monster.
Not always.
Some people need total silence. Some people focus better with low background sound. The problem is when people copy someone else’s setup and assume it’ll work for them.
I’ve had sessions where silence made me hyper-aware of every tiny noise. And I’ve had others where a quiet instrumental playlist helped me settle in fast.
The best environment is the one that helps you focus consistently.
Try each of these for one study session:
Track which one helped you finish more work with less distraction. Don’t guess — test it.
Pretty notes are not the same as useful notes.
I know, I know. It hurts. I’ve spent way too long making notes that looked like they belonged in a stationery ad. And then I couldn’t use them when it mattered.
If your notes are beautiful but useless, they’re just expensive art.
A messy page you can study from is better than a perfect page you never revisit.
This one messes with a lot of students.
People assume good studying should feel smooth and comfortable. But real learning usually feels a little uncomfortable. That’s normal.
Effort is not the enemy. Confusion is part of the process.
When you struggle to remember something, your brain is building stronger connections. That’s actually good news.
So if studying feels a bit difficult, don’t panic. That doesn’t mean it’s failing. It might mean it’s working.
Here’s the stuff I’d actually bet on.
Ask yourself questions and answer from memory.
Examples:
Review information over time instead of all at once.
A simple schedule:
Do old papers, quizzes, and sample problems.
This is huge. If your exam asks you to solve problems, don’t just read the theory. Practice the exact skill.
Make studying easy to start.
Examples:
That’s why tools like Trider (myhabits.in) can help — they make consistency way less dramatic.
Here’s the blunt version: stop copying study advice because it looks smart.
Test it.
For the next week, track which method actually helps you remember things. Not which one feels productive. Not which one looks good on Instagram. The one that makes your brain work better.
Pick one subject and compare:
The next day, quiz yourself on both. See which one stuck.
I’m betting active recall wins. Every time I’ve done this, the difference was embarrassing.
A lot of common study tips survive because they feel easy, not because they work.
Reading, highlighting, and cramming can all play a role — but only if they’re part of a real strategy. If you want better results, focus on testing yourself, spacing your reviews, and building a small daily routine.
And honestly, that’s the part most people skip. They want a magical method, but the magic is usually just boring consistency.
So start small, ditch the fake productivity, and build a study habit that actually sticks. And if you want a simple way to stay consistent, give Trider a try at myhabits.in — it might be the nudge that keeps you on track.