You've got a mountain of information to learn. A textbook the size of a brick, notes on notes, and an exam breathing down your neck. The normal reaction is to start at page one and just read.
Don't do that.
Passively reading and highlighting feels like work, but it's mostly a waste of time. Your brain recognizes the material on the page and mistakes that familiarity for actual knowledge. It’s a trap. Studies show students who just review their notes this way do way worse on tests. One study found they forget up to 80% of the material in a single week.
You have to stop being a spectator and actually engage with the stuff you're trying to learn.
Stop Recognizing, Start Recalling
The most important change you can make is switching to active recall. This just means forcing your brain to pull information out of your head instead of just recognizing it on the page. It’s harder. It feels slower at first. But it actually works.
- The Blank Page Method: Read a chapter or go through your lecture notes. Then close the book. Put the notes away. On a blank sheet of paper, write down everything you remember. Key concepts, formulas, connections—anything. When you can't squeeze anything else out, go back to your notes to check what you got right and fill in what you missed.
- Teach It (The Feynman Technique): Try to explain a concept to someone who knows nothing about it. Use simple terms. If you get stuck or have to fall back on jargon, you've found a gap in your own knowledge. Go back to the book, figure it out properly, and try explaining it again.
- Do Practice Questions: Don't just read the chapter. Do the problems at the end. Make your own questions. Answering questions forces you to apply what you know, which is the whole point.
I remember studying for a brutal organic chemistry final. I’d spent days just re-reading the textbook and none of it was sticking. It was 4:17 PM, the day before the exam, and I was panicking in my 2011 Honda Civic. I finally just threw the book in the back seat, grabbed a notebook, and tried to recreate every reaction pathway from memory. It was ugly. But those gaps I found in the parking lot were the exact things I focused on that night. And it worked.