@keeshasha: emeee

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Wednesday 16 July 2025 11:34:12 GMT
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vinice004
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pretty ni ateeee
2025-07-19 09:20:12
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1. Use Active Recall (Test Yourself, Don’t Just Review) ⭐️How to do it: Instead of re-reading notes, close your book and try to retrieve the information from memory. Use flashcards, practice questions, or teach the concept out loud. 🐣Psychology behind it: The testing effect shows that memory strengthens when you pull information out rather than when you passively take it in. Each retrieval strengthens neural pathways, making recall easier in the future. 2. Space Out Your Study Sessions (Spaced Repetition) ⭐️How to do it: Break up studying into shorter sessions over several days instead of cramming the night before. Tools like Anki or Quizlet can automate this with spaced repetition. 🐣 Psychology behind it: The spacing effect shows that our brains forget information quickly unless it’s re-encountered over time. Spacing forces your brain to “relearn,” which deepens long-term memory. 3. Switch Between Topics (Interleaving Practice) ⭐️How to do it: Instead of studying one subject or type of problem all at once (blocked practice), mix different topics, question types, or skills in a single study session. 🐣Psychology behind it: Interleaving improves problem-solving and flexibility because it forces your brain to constantly retrieve and compare different information, strengthening connections and preventing “autopilot” learning. ✨ Bonus framing for students: Think of studying like training for a sport. You don’t just shoot 100 free throws, you mix drills, review plays, and scrimmage. That variety makes your brain sharper for “game day” (exams). #collegestudent #collegeadvice #studytok #studyhacks #academicweapon
1. Use Active Recall (Test Yourself, Don’t Just Review) ⭐️How to do it: Instead of re-reading notes, close your book and try to retrieve the information from memory. Use flashcards, practice questions, or teach the concept out loud. 🐣Psychology behind it: The testing effect shows that memory strengthens when you pull information out rather than when you passively take it in. Each retrieval strengthens neural pathways, making recall easier in the future. 2. Space Out Your Study Sessions (Spaced Repetition) ⭐️How to do it: Break up studying into shorter sessions over several days instead of cramming the night before. Tools like Anki or Quizlet can automate this with spaced repetition. 🐣 Psychology behind it: The spacing effect shows that our brains forget information quickly unless it’s re-encountered over time. Spacing forces your brain to “relearn,” which deepens long-term memory. 3. Switch Between Topics (Interleaving Practice) ⭐️How to do it: Instead of studying one subject or type of problem all at once (blocked practice), mix different topics, question types, or skills in a single study session. 🐣Psychology behind it: Interleaving improves problem-solving and flexibility because it forces your brain to constantly retrieve and compare different information, strengthening connections and preventing “autopilot” learning. ✨ Bonus framing for students: Think of studying like training for a sport. You don’t just shoot 100 free throws, you mix drills, review plays, and scrimmage. That variety makes your brain sharper for “game day” (exams). #collegestudent #collegeadvice #studytok #studyhacks #academicweapon

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