The biggest lie about junior high is that you need to study for hours.
You don't. You just have to be smart about it. Staring at a textbook until your eyes glaze over is a waste of time. The point isn't to study more; it's to get better results in less time.
Ditch the Highlighter
Your brain isn't a sponge. Passively reading your notes or highlighting a textbook is basically useless for remembering things long-term. It feels like you're working, but your brain isn't doing anything to store the information.
A better way is something called active recall. Itโs simple: you force your brain to pull information out instead of just letting it wash over you.
- Flashcards: Make them yourself. The act of writing them is part of studying.
- Quiz yourself: Cover up the answers in your notes and try to explain the concepts out loud.
- Teach someone else: If you can explain the carbon cycle to your little brother, you actually know it.
I remember bombing a 7th-grade science quiz on photosynthesis. Iโd spent all night staring at my notes in the back of my mom's 2011 Honda Civic after soccer practice, but none of it stuck. My teacher told me I was just recognizing the words, not actually recalling the concepts. That failed quiz taught me more than the textbook ever did. Recognizing isn't knowing.
The 25-Minute Rule
Your brain canโt focus for hours on end. Instead, use the Pomodoro Technique. You work in short, focused bursts, which is way more effective than one long, draining session.
Hereโs how it works:
- Set a timer for 25 minutes.
- Work on ONE thing. No phone, no other tabs.
- When the timer goes off, take a 5-minute break. Walk around, get a drink.
- After four rounds, take a longer break (15-30 minutes).