study habits questionnaire for college students

April 18, 2026by Mindcrate Team

What's wrong with your study habits?

You’re putting in the hours. You’re highlighting your textbooks until they’re neon yellow. But you still feel like you’re guessing on exams and not getting the grades you want.

If you're studying for hours and not seeing results, the problem isn't your effort. It's your method.

Most of us were never really taught how to learn. We just picked up habits and hoped for the best. But hope isn't a strategy. To get better, you have to see where you're starting from. This isn't a test. It's a mirror. Be honest with yourself.

Part 1: Your Environment

This is about where and when you study. The physical space matters more than you think.

  • Is my phone within arm's reach when I study? Is it face up?
  • Am I working on my bed, the couch, or at a real desk?
  • Is the TV on? Am I listening to music with lyrics?
  • Do I tell my roommates or family I need to focus, or just hope they don’t bother me?
  • Do I have a specific time blocked out for studying, or do I fit it in whenever?

Part 2: Your Process

This is about what you do when you sit down to "study."

  • Do I just re-read my notes and the textbook over and over?
  • Do I try to explain the concepts from my notes in my own words?
  • Do I try to teach the material to someone else (or just an empty chair)?
  • Do I use practice tests or quiz myself with flashcards?
  • Do I study in long, marathon sessions of 3+ hours?
  • Or do I use focused sprints, like 25 minutes on and 5 minutes off?

Part 3: Your Planning

Good grades don't happen by accident. They’re the result of a system.

  • Do I know the dates of all my midterms and finals right now without looking?
  • Do I start big projects the week they're due, or the day they’re assigned?
  • Do I review my notes from a lecture within 24 hours?
  • Do I have a weekly plan that maps out what I'm going to study each day?
The Study Cycle: Active vs. Passive Passive Re-reading Highlighting Active Self-Testing Teaching Effort In Results Out

What this tells you

If you answered "yes" to the first few questions in each section, you're probably stuck in a passive study loop. It feels like work, and you're putting in the hours, but passive habits like re-reading in a distracting environment are an inefficient way to learn. Your brain isn't being challenged to retrieve information, which is the only way to form strong memories.

If you answered "yes" to the latter questions, you're on the right track. You're using active recall. This means forcing your brain to pull information out of thin air. Making practice tests, explaining a concept to a friend, and using flashcards are all forms of active recall. It's harder. It feels less productive in the moment. But it's what actually works.

I learned this the hard way. My sophomore year, I was close to failing statistics. I spent a weekend just re-reading the textbook, fueled by lukewarm gas station coffee. I remember looking at the clock at 4:17 AM on a Sunday and realizing I couldn't explain the single most important concept from chapter one. I had spent 20 hours "studying" and retained almost nothing.

That's when I switched. I started using a timer for focus sessions, leaving my phone in another room, and turning every chapter into a list of questions I had to answer from memory. My grade went from a D+ to a B in four weeks.

A few things to try this week

Don't try to change everything at once. Pick one or two of these.

  1. Use a timer. Try the Pomodoro technique: 25 minutes of focused study, then a 5-minute break. During that 25 minutes, your phone is off and in another room. No exceptions.
  2. Create questions first. Before you read a chapter, go through and turn all the headings and bolded terms into questions. Your reading is now a hunt for answers, not a passive scan.
  3. Schedule it. Put your study blocks on your calendar like they're a class you can't miss. Protect that time. A vague goal to "study more" is useless. A plan to "review chemistry notes from 7-8 PM on Tuesday" is a real plan.
  4. Take a real break. Your brain needs rest to consolidate information. Studying for 6 hours straight is less effective than three 2-hour sessions with breaks. Go for a walk. Get a snack. Do anything but look at a screen.
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