Stop passively rereading your notes—it's one of the worst ways to learn. To build strong memories, you must actively recall information using techniques like spaced repetition and self-quizzing.
Your brain isn't a hard drive. It's a muscle.
But most of us treat it like a filing cabinet we just stuff information into, hoping it'll be there when we need it. Then we get frustrated when we can't find anything. The problem isn’t your brain’s capacity; it’s the way you’re putting things in there. Simply rereading your notes is one of the most passive ways to learn. It feels like you're doing something, but the research shows it’s one of the worst strategies for long-term memory.
Let's fix that.
The strange thing about memory is that forgetting is part of the process. Your brain is built to let go of things that don't seem important. The trick is to signal what matters.
The way you do that is with spaced repetition.
Instead of cramming for five hours the night before, you study in shorter bursts over several days. Each time you return to the material, you're fighting against the natural tendency to forget. You’re telling your brain, "Hey, pay attention to this. Keep it."
When your brain has almost forgotten something, it has to work harder to pull it back. That effort is what builds a strong memory.
A simple schedule could be:
Each session makes the memory stick a little better. You can use a calendar or a habit tracker like Trider to schedule these reviews and build a streak.
There’s a world of difference between recognizing something and recalling it. Recognizing is easy. You see a term on the page and think, "Yep, saw that before." Recalling is hard. It’s pulling that same information out of your head with no cues.
Exams test recall, not recognition.
The best way to practice this is with Active Recall. Instead of just rereading, you force yourself to retrieve the information. Quiz yourself. Use flashcards. Try to explain a topic to a friend. Write down everything you know about a subject on a blank sheet of paper.
I once tried to memorize the license plate of a car involved in a fender-bender I saw. I looked at it, thought I had it, and walked away. Five minutes later, a police officer asked me for the plate number. I had nothing. I could have recognized it from a list, but I couldn't recall it from scratch. That's the difference.
This leads to the Feynman Technique, named after the physicist Richard Feynman. It's dead simple and it works.
Teaching forces you to really understand something, not just memorize its shape.
Trying to memorize a 20-page chapter is a waste of time. You have to break it down. This is called chunking.
Group information into small, related clusters. Don't try to memorize all 206 bones in the body at once; start with the bones of the hand. Our brains are pattern-matching machines, and chunking creates those patterns. It makes big, messy topics feel manageable.
So stop rereading. Start retrieving information. Set reminders to review things just as you're about to forget them. Force yourself to explain concepts out loud. Break big subjects down into smaller pieces. It's more work than just skimming your notes, but the whole point is that it's supposed to be. That's how you know it's working.
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