study tips for reading

April 18, 2026by Mindcrate Team

Your eyes move across the page, but your mind is somewhere else. An hour of reading a dense textbook goes by and you remember nothing. That’s passive reading.

It’s a trap, and it’s why most studying feels like a waste of time. But the fix isn't about focusing harder. It's about reading differently.

Stop Highlighting Everything

We were all told that highlighting is productive. It's not. For most people, it’s just a way to feel like you're working. Swiping a bright yellow line over a sentence gives your brain a tiny hit of accomplishment, but you haven't actually learned anything.

Highlighting lets you move on without understanding. So instead of the marker, grab a pen. When you hit a key idea, write a note in the margin. Or turn the book over and try to explain the concept out loud. If you can't, you don't get it yet.

Turn Headings into Questions Before You Read

Don't go into a chapter blind. Before you read a single paragraph, get the lay of the land. Read the chapter title, the subheadings, and the introduction. Glance at the charts. This takes maybe five minutes.

Then, turn every heading into a question. "The Treaty of Versailles" becomes "What was the Treaty of Versailles?" "Cellular Respiration" becomes "How does cellular respiration work?"

This one trick changes everything. You’re no longer just passively taking in words. You're actively hunting for answers.

SURVEY QUESTION READ RECITE THE ACTIVE READING LOOP

Explain it Like You're Talking to a 10-Year-Old

If you can't explain something simply, you don't understand it. After you finish a section, put the book down and explain the core idea out loud like you're talking to a kid. This is the Feynman Technique. If you get stuck or just repeat jargon from the book, you haven't learned it. You just memorized it. Go back.

I remember struggling with a philosophy concept once. I read the same chapter for hours until my eyes glazed over. I finally gave up and went downstairs. My roommate was watching TV. For no real reason, I tried to explain the idea to him. I started with, "Okay, so imagine..." and halfway through the sentence, it just clicked in my own head. He had no idea what I was talking about. I remember the cable box clock said 4:17 PM. It didn't matter. Forcing myself to say it simply was the last step.

Your Environment is Everything

You can't do deep work in a place designed for distraction. Studying on your bed with your phone nearby is a fantasy. Your brain associates the bed with sleep and your phone with cheap dopamine. Find a dedicated spot. A library, a coffee shop, a specific chair at the kitchen table that is only for work.

And use tech to fight tech. Block distracting apps and websites for a set period. A solid 45 minutes of uninterrupted reading is worth more than three hours of fragmented "studying." It’s about the quality of your attention.

Space it Out

Cramming doesn't work for long-term learning. To make information stick, you have to review it over time. After you read a chapter, don't just forget about it. Review your notes the next day. Then check back in a few days later, and again after a week.

This process tells your brain this stuff is important enough to keep. Each review gets faster. It feels less like learning and more like remembering.

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