Seventh grade is weird. You're not a little kid anymore, but you're not in high school, either. The work gets harder, there are more teachers, and suddenly you're just supposed to know how to study. Nobody ever actually teaches you how.
Let's fix that. Forget the usual advice. Most of it is garbage.
Stop "Studying." Start Practicing.
Reading your notes over and over is the worst way to learn something. It feels like you're working, but your brain just tunes it out. It's called passive review, and it's a complete waste of your time.
You have to practice pulling information out of your brain, not just cramming it in. This is called active recall.
- Quiz yourself. Use flashcards. Cover up the definitions in your textbook and try to explain them out loud.
- Teach it. Explain the water cycle to your dog. For real. If you can't explain it simply, you don't actually know it.
- Do the problems. For math and science, reading the chapter is useless. You have to do the practice problems. All of them.
Your Brain Hates Marathons
Trying to study for three hours straight is a terrible idea. Your brain can only really focus for about 25-30 minutes before it starts looking for an escape. So don't fight it. Use that.
It's called the Pomodoro Technique. You work in short, focused bursts and then take a real break.
- Pick one thing. Just one. "Study for the science test" isn't a task. "Review chapter 4 vocab" is a task.
- Set a timer for 25 minutes. For those 25 minutes, you do nothing but that one task. No phone, no snacks, no talking.
- When the timer rings, stop. Even if you're on a roll.
- Take a 5-minute break. A real break. Get up. Walk around. Get water. Do not check your phone.
- Repeat.