Stop memorizing engineering formulas like you're studying for a history quiz. Use proven systems like spaced repetition and active recall to build a deep, foundational understanding that actually lasts.
The biggest mistake I see engineering students make is studying for their classes like it's a history course. They just try to memorize formulas. That might get you through a quiz, but it's a recipe for disaster. Engineering isn't a list of facts; it's a tower. If you don't build the foundation right, everything you try to stack on top will fall over.
It's not about being a genius. It's about having a system.
Your brain isn't a hard drive. You can't just download information and expect it to be there later. All-nighters actually hurt your ability to remember things and solve problems because your brain locks in memories while you sleep.
The fix is something called spaced repetition. Instead of cramming for eight hours, you review the material in short bursts over longer and longer periods.
Every time you force your brain to pull up the information, the connection gets stronger. It feels harder than just re-reading your notes, but that's the point. The struggle is what makes it stick. There are plenty of apps that can manage the schedule for you so you don't have to think about it.
Passively re-reading textbooks or highlighting notes is mostly a waste of time. Your brain just glazes over. You need to do active recall.
This just means forcing your brain to retrieve information without looking at it.
I remember trying to explain Kirchhoff's Voltage Law to my history-major roommate at 11:38 PM one night. By the time I was done, he was more confused than ever, and I realized I didn't really get it either. I had just memorized the words. But that failure forced me to go back and learn it for real.
That brings me to a more structured way of "teaching" a concept to learn it. It’s a four-step method from the physicist Richard Feynman for learning pretty much anything.
This is brutally effective at showing you what you don't actually know.
The amount of work in an engineering program is no joke. If you don't manage your time, you will drown.
The goal isn't just to pass exams. It's to actually understand the material so deeply that it becomes part of how you think. That kind of understanding can't be rushed. It has to be built, block by block, over time.
Stop passively rereading your notes; it's a comfortable but useless habit. To survive pharmacy school, you must switch to active recall—forcing your brain to retrieve information, not just recognize it, is the only way to make it stick.
Stop memorizing formulas; it's the biggest mistake you can make in physics. Focus on understanding the core concepts first, and the ability to solve problems will follow.
Stop fighting your ADHD brain with useless advice that doesn't work. Instead, use practical strategies that work *with* your interest-based wiring, like the 20-minute rule and gamifying your tasks to stay focused.
Stop fighting your brain and start tricking it to beat procrastination. Break down overwhelming goals into ridiculously small tasks and use timed work sessions to build unstoppable momentum.
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