Most advice for psychology students is generic. Read the book, make flashcards, go to class. You already know that.
The hard part isn't knowing the tasks, but getting the information to actually stick. Psychology is the study of the mind, so you might as well use its principles to study better. This isn't about more hours. It’s about being smart with the hours you have.
Stop Passively Rereading
Making your textbook a fluorescent yellow mess with a highlighter doesn't work. Rereading your notes for the fifth time is a waste. These are passive habits that create an illusion of familiarity—you start to recognize the concepts, but you can't recall them from scratch when it counts.
The answer is active recall.
You have to force your brain to pull up the information without looking at the page. Instead of rereading the chapter on Piaget, close the book. Write down everything you remember about his stages. Draw a diagram. Try to explain it out loud to your roommate. The struggle to retrieve the information is what builds the memory. It feels harder for a reason. And it works much better.
I learned this the hard way trying to cram for my cognitive psych midterm. I was sitting in my beat-up 2011 Honda Civic outside the library at 4:17 PM, having reread the chapter on memory models four times. I thought I knew it. But when I tried to draw the Atkinson-Shiffrin model from memory, nothing came out. Just a fog. That’s the illusion of familiarity right there.
Use Spaced Repetition
Cramming is for surviving an exam, not for learning. You might pass, but that information will be gone in a week. The Ebbinghaus forgetting curve is brutal. We lose most of what we learn within a few days if we don't actively bring it back up.
Spaced repetition is how you beat the curve. Don't study a topic for five hours on a Sunday. Study it for an hour every other day. This makes your brain re-access and strengthen the memory over time.
A simple habit tracker can help. Set up reminders to review specific topics and build a streak you won't want to break. It automates the schedule so you don't have to think about it.