Stop re-reading your textbook. It’s one of the worst ways to study. Cognitive scientists call it the "illusion of knowing"—it feels like you're doing something, but your brain is just recognizing the material, not working hard enough to store it.
If you want better grades, you have to get active.
Fight The Fog
You can't learn if you're exhausted. Sleep is when your brain files away the day's information, so it's not optional. An all-nighter is a terrible trade; you might cram a few extra facts, but you lose the ability to think clearly. Just get 6-8 hours. It's the easiest academic win there is.
The 25-Minute Sprint
The Pomodoro Technique works surprisingly well. Set a timer for 25 minutes and just work. No phone, no tabs, no distractions. When the timer goes off, take a 5-minute break. After four of these sprints, take a longer break. It works because short, focused bursts are better than long, fading sessions. It turns studying from a marathon into a series of small, winnable races.
The best way to study is to force your brain to retrieve information. Don't just look at your notes. Close the book and write down everything you remember. Say the answer to a flashcard out loud before you flip it.
I remember bombing a practice quiz for my cognitive psychology class. I’d spent hours just reading the material in my 2011 Honda Civic, thinking I knew it all. The panic set in as I stared at the blank questions. My phone said 4:17 PM. That failure made me change everything. For the real exam, I spent almost all my time just quizzing myself. It was way harder, but it worked.
Try to explain a complex topic to a friend who knows nothing about it. If you can make them get it, you get it.
Mix It Up
Don't study one subject for hours. That's called "blocking," and it's not very effective. Instead, try "interleaving"—switching between different topics in one session. It feels messier, but it builds stronger connections in your brain. Do 30 minutes of calculus, then 30 minutes of history, then go back to a different kind of calculus problem. It makes your brain work harder, which is the whole point.
Make a Study Space
Have one spot that's just for studying. When you sit there, your brain should know it's time to work, not scroll. It's a simple trigger. Keep it clean and free of distractions.
Spaced Repetition
Cramming works for tomorrow's test, but that information will be gone by next week. The fix is spaced repetition. You review information at increasing intervals—after a day, then a few days later, then a week later. It tells your brain this stuff is important and should be moved into long-term storage. It's how you actually remember what you learned.
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