Study Tips for When a Subject Feels Impossible
Some subjects just feel locked. You're on one side of the door, the textbook is in a different language, and you can read the same paragraph four times without a single word sticking. We've all been there.
The usual advice to "just study more" is useless when you're already giving it everything. You don't need to bang your head against the wall harder; you need to find the right key for the lock.
Stop Just Reading
Highlighting isn't studying. Rereading your notes until the words blur isn't studying. It feels like work, but it’s a trap. When your brain recognizes the words, it gets comfortable and tricks you into thinking you know the material. But it's just a false sense of familiarity.
You have to force your brain to actually work. It's called active recall. Instead of just reading about the Krebs cycle, close the book and try to draw it from memory. Instead of staring at a vocabulary list, cover up the definitions and force yourself to explain each word out loud.
It’s supposed to feel hard. That struggle is what actually builds the connections in your brain.
The Feynman Technique
If you can't explain something simply, you don't really understand it. That's the core of the Feynman Technique, and it's brutally effective when a topic feels like a tangled mess of jargon.
- Write the concept at the top of a page.
- Explain it in plain English, like you're teaching it to a smart 12-year-old. Don't let yourself use any complicated terms as a crutch.
- When you get stuck, you've found the edge of your knowledge. That's the good part. Go back to your notes or the textbook, figure it out, and fill in the gap.
- Simplify your explanation again. Is there a better analogy? A simpler way to say it?