Stop re-reading your notes—it's one of the worst ways to study. True learning comes from forcing your brain to recall information and working in focused sprints, not cramming marathons.
Stop re-reading your notes. It's the most common way to study, and it's also one of the worst. Your brain tricks itself into thinking it knows the material just because the words look familiar.
Recognizing isn't knowing.
The real learning happens when you force your brain to do the work.
This is called active recall. It means pulling information out of your head, not just cramming it in.
After you read a chapter, close the book. Write down everything you can remember. Or, try to explain the main idea to a friend. The struggle to pull that information from memory is what actually builds the connection in your brain.
It's supposed to feel harder than just re-reading. That's how you know it's working.
I completely missed this for years. I spent all of sophomore year highlighting my textbooks until the pages were radioactive yellow, and my grades were just okay. Then one afternoon junior year, I was complaining about a history exam to my friend Sarah while she was driving me home in her beat-up Civic. She told me to stop highlighting and start quizzing myself. "Just try it," she said. It changed everything.
You can't focus for hours on end. Nobody can. The Pomodoro Technique is built around that fact.
You work for 25 minutes, completely focused. Then you take a 5-minute break. Do that four times, and then you get a real break, maybe 20 or 30 minutes.
It works because the intensity is short. The breaks stop you from burning out. You can use your phone's timer. You don't need a special app.
This sounds wrong, but your brain needs to almost forget something to really learn it. When you struggle to remember something you learned a few days ago, you're strengthening that memory for the long term. It's called spaced repetition.
Don't cram for eight hours in one night. It's better to study for an hour a day over eight days. Review the material after a day, then after three days, then after a week. That's what makes it stick.
Figure out where you work best. Maybe it's a silent library. Maybe it's a noisy coffee shop. Find that place and make it your spot.
And be ruthless about distractions. Your phone is the enemy of focus. Turn it off. Put it in another room. Every notification resets your brain, and you have to start the hard work of focusing all over again.
Seriously. This isn't a luxury. Sleep is when your brain actually processes and stores everything you just tried to learn.
Pulling an all-nighter is mostly a waste of time. You'll remember more from one good hour of studying followed by a full night of sleep than you will from three hours of exhausted cramming. It's not even close.
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