Stop memorizing and start doing. Master accounting with a system built on active problem-solving and consistent practice, not cramming.
Stop memorizing. Accounting isn't a history test. You can't just cram the night before. It builds on itself, so if you don't really get Chapter 1, you're toast by Chapter 3. Forget just passing the exam—the real goal is to understand how the pieces connect.
People who get this stuff don't have better memories; they have better systems.
Reading the textbook is the bare minimum. It’s passive. You have to make it active. When you finish a section, close the book. Try to explain the concept out loud, in your own words. What’s the why behind it?
If you can't explain it simply, you don't get it yet.
And don't read the chapter front to back like a novel. Jump around. Read the summary first. Look at the questions at the end so you know what you’re supposed to be learning. It primes your brain to find the important stuff.
You can’t learn to swim by reading a book; you have to get in the water. Accounting is the same. There's no substitute for doing problems. Lots of them.
Do every single homework problem. Then do more. Find extra questions online or in study guides until you see a problem and instantly know the pattern.
I remember this one time, at 4:17 PM on a Tuesday, I was stuck on a consolidated financial statement problem. It felt impossible. I’d been staring at it for an hour in the library, my 2011 Honda Civic ticking outside as it cooled down. I finally went to the professor’s office hours. He didn't give me the answer. He just asked one question that reframed the whole thing, and it clicked. Getting stuck and asking for help is where the real learning happens.
Try to teach the material to someone else. It's one of the best ways to find out if you really know it. Find a study partner or a small group. When you have to explain the concepts out loud, you find the gaps in your own knowledge fast.
Plus, working with other people means you spend less time stuck on one problem.
Your brain is built to forget stuff. You have to fight it. Short, daily reviews are better than one long, miserable cram session. Seriously, 30 minutes every day beats a 4-hour marathon once a week.
And don't just re-read your notes. That's useless. Test yourself. Make flashcards. Try the "blurting" method: grab a blank piece of paper and write down everything you remember about a topic. Then check your notes to see what you missed.
Mnemonics also help. They seem silly, but they work. Lots of people use "DC ADE LER" to remember the elements of equity, liabilities, and assets (Debit Credits: Assets, Draw, Expenses on the left; Liabilities, Equity, Revenue on the right). Find one that sticks, or make your own.
Finally, don't psych yourself out. It's easy to get overwhelmed. So stay organized. Make a study schedule and actually stick to it. Keep all your notes in one place.
But don't forget to look after yourself. You can't learn anything when you're exhausted. Get some sleep.
Stop studying harder; it's a trap. Learn to study smarter with techniques that get you better grades in less time so you can get back to your actual life.
Studying with ADHD isn't a willpower problem; it's a brain-wiring one. Ditch the useless "just focus" advice for concrete strategies that work *with* your brain, from creating a distraction-free zone to breaking down projects into tiny, manageable steps.
Stop memorizing dates. History is about understanding the "why" behind the story, not just memorizing facts for a test.
Stop rereading your notes; your brain mistakes recognition for recall, which is what exams actually test. Instead, use active recall techniques like practice tests and spaced repetition to force your brain to retrieve information from memory.
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