Trying to learn the life sciences can feel like drinking from a firehose. Between biology, anatomy, and biochemistry, the amount you have to memorize is enough to break you.
If you think you can get by just reading the textbook, you're in for a rough time. You'll start to recognize the terms on the page, but that's a trap. Recognizing a word isn't the same as understanding it well enough to apply it on an exam. You have to be active. You have to connect the ideas.
It's a web, not a list
Biochemistry, especially, is all about pathways and cycles. Everything connects. If you try to learn each step of glycolysis as a separate fact, you're going to fail.
You have to be able to draw the major pathways from memory. It sounds like a pain, but it's the only way. Start with the key molecules and enzymes, then link them. The names of the molecules are often clues to their function, so learn the naming conventions first.
This same rule applies everywhere. When you're studying anatomy, don't just memorize the name of a muscle. Ask what it does. Connect the structure to the function. That's how you turn a dry fact into a piece of a logical system you can actually remember.
Use it or lose it
Reading your notes over and over is probably the worst way to study. Your brain needs to be forced to retrieve information. It's called active recall, and it's everything.
How to do it:
- Test yourself. All the time. Don't wait for the exam. Use flashcards, do practice questions, and try to explain concepts out loud without looking at your notes.
- Teach someone. Find a study partner and take turns explaining concepts to each other. You'll find the holes in your own understanding pretty fast.
- Explain it simply. Try to explain a complex topic in the simplest terms you can, like you're talking to a kid. This is called the Feynman Technique, and it forces you to get to the core of the idea.