Stop rereading your notes. Seriously. It’s the most passive, least effective way to study. Highlighting feels productive, but it doesn't actually help you learn. The real gains happen when you force your brain to struggle a little.
Your brain learns by doing, not just reading
Active recall is just pulling information out of your memory. Instead of reading a chapter, close the book and scribble down everything you can remember. That struggle to recall is what makes memories stick.
A few ways to do this:
Teach someone. Grab a friend or just talk to your wall. Explain a concept from start to finish. The spots where you get stuck are the gaps you need to patch.
Use flashcards. But don't just flip them. Actually try to say the answer out loud first.
Do practice problems. Don't peek at the answer key. Make it feel like the real test.
It feels harder and slower than just rereading. But it works. Quizzing yourself helps you retain way more than just passively scanning the text again.
Make a plan
Finals week feels like a sprint, but you can’t just wing it. Don't just block out "study for chem." Get specific.
Map it all out. Put every exam date and project deadline on one calendar so you can see the whole battlefield.
Be ruthless with priorities. A cumulative final in your hardest class is worth more of your time than a small paper in a class you're acing.
Block your time. Schedule it. "Review Psych Ch. 5-7 from 9 to 11 AM." This stops you from wasting energy deciding what to do next.
I remember my sophomore year, panicking about a bio final in the back of my 2011 Honda Civic. It was exactly 4:17 PM, and I had three other exams to worry about. The only thing that saved me was meticulously planning out every single study session for the entire week, right down to 15-minute breaks.
Play the long game with spaced repetition
Cramming is a losing battle. Our brains are built to forget things over time. The trick is to interrupt that forgetting process. With spaced repetition, you review material at increasing intervals.
It might look like this:
Day 1: Learn something new.
Day 2: Review it.
Day 4: Review it again.
Day 7: One more time.
It feels weird because you end up studying less often, but you remember more. You’re making your brain work just a little bit to retrieve the memory, which makes it stronger.
Don't sabotage yourself
You can have the best study plan in the world, but it’s useless if you're exhausted.
Sleep. It's not optional. Getting 7-9 hours is one of the best study tools there is. It's when your brain actually stores what you learned. An all-nighter is just self-sabotage.
Get up. A five-minute walk can hit the reset button on your brain. It helps with stress and focus.
Take real breaks. Grinding for hours just leads to burnout. Try the Pomodoro Technique: 25 minutes of focus, 5 minutes off. And on that break, actually get up and walk away. Don't just open a different app on your phone.
Find a place to study that isn't your bed. A library, a coffee shop, anywhere your brain knows it's time to work. Turn your phone off. Put it in another room. These small things really do work.
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