10 Rules of Good and Bad Studying that Every Learner Must Know
10 RULES
OF GOOD STUDYING
1. Use
recall. After you read a
page, look away and recall the main ideas. Highlight very little, and never
highlight anything you haven’t put in your mind first by recalling. Try
recalling main ideas when you are walking to class or in a different room from
where you originally learned it. An ability to recall—to generate the ideas
from inside yourself—is one of the key indicators of good learning.
2. Test
yourself. On everything.
All the time. Flash cards are your friend.
3. Chunk your
problems. Chunking is
understanding and practicing with a problem solution so that it can all come to
mind in a flash. After you solve a problem, rehearse it. Make sure you can
solve it cold—every step. Pretend it’s a song and learn to play it over and
over again in your mind, so the information combines into one smooth chunk you
can pull up whenever you want.
4. Space your
repetition. Spread out
your learning in any subject a little every day, just like an athlete. Your
brain is like a muscle—it can handle only a limited amount of exercise on one
subject at a time.
5. Alternate
different problem-solving techniques during your practice. Never practice too long at any one session
using only one problem-solving technique—after a while, you are just mimicking
what you did on the previous problem. Mix it up and work on different types of
problems. This teaches you both how and when to
use a technique. (Books generally are not set up this way, so you’ll need to do
this on your own.) After every assignment and test, go over your errors, make
sure you understand why you made them, and then rework your solutions. To study
most effectively, handwrite (don’t type) a problem on one side of a flash card
and the solution on the other. (Handwriting builds stronger neural structures
in memory than typing.) You might also photograph the card if you want to load
it into a study app on your smartphone. Quiz yourself randomly on different
types of problems. Another way to do this is to randomly flip through your
book, pick out a problem, and see whether you can solve it cold.
6. Take
breaks. It is common to
be unable to solve problems or figure out concepts in math or science the first
time you encounter them. This is why a little study every day is much better
than a lot of studying all at once. When you get frustrated with a math or
science problem, take a break so that another part of your mind can take over
and work in the background.
7. Use explanatory
questioning and simple analogies. Whenever you are struggling with a concept, think to yourself, How
can I explain this so that a ten-year-old could understand it? Using
an analogy really helps, like saying that the flow of electricity is like the
flow of water. Don’t just think your explanation—say it out loud or put it in
writing. The additional effort of speaking and writing allows you to more
deeply encode (that is, convert into neural memory structures) what you are
learning.
8. Focus. Turn off all interrupting beeps and alarms on
your phone and computer, and then turn on a timer for twenty-five minutes. Focus
intently for those twenty-five minutes and try to work as diligently as you
can. After the timer goes off, give yourself a small, fun reward. A few of
these sessions in a day can really move your studies forward. Try to set up
times and places where studying—not glancing at your computer or phone—is just
something you naturally do.
9. Eat your frogs
first. Do the hardest
thing earliest in the day, when you are fresh.
10. Make a mental
contrast. Imagine where
you’ve come from and contrast that with the dream of where your studies will
take you. Post a picture or words in your workspace to remind you of your
dream. Look at that when you find your motivation lagging. This work will pay
off both for you and those you love!
TEN RULES
OF BAD STUDYING
Avoid these
techniques—they can waste your time even while they fool you into thinking
you’re learning!
1. Passive
rereading—sitting passively
and running your eyes back over a page. Unless you can prove that
the material is moving into your brain by recalling the main ideas without
looking at the page, rereading is a waste of time.
2. Letting
highlights overwhelm you. Highlighting
your text can fool your mind into thinking you are putting something in your
brain, when all you’re really doing is moving your hand. A little highlighting
here and there is okay—sometimes it can be helpful in flagging important
points. But if you are using highlighting as a memory tool, make sure that what
you mark is also going into your brain.
3. Merely glancing
at a problem’s solution and thinking you know how to do it. This is one of the worst errors students make
while studying. You need to be able to solve a problem
step-by-step, without looking at the solution.
4. Waiting until
the last minute to study. Would
you cram at the last minute if you were practicing for a track meet? Your brain
is like a muscle—it can handle only a limited amount of exercise on one subject
at a time.
5. Repeatedly
solving problems of the same type that you already know how to solve. If you just sit around solving similar
problems during your practice, you’re not actually preparing for a test—it’s
like preparing for a big basketball game by just practicing your dribbling.
6. Letting study
sessions with friends turn into chat sessions. Checking your problem solving with friends, and
quizzing one another on what you know, can make learning more enjoyable, expose
flaws in your thinking, and deepen your learning. But if your joint study
sessions turn to fun before the work is done, you’re wasting your time and
should find another study group.
7. Neglecting to
read the textbook before you start working problems. Would you dive into a pool before you knew how
to swim? The textbook is your swimming instructor—it guides you toward the
answers. You will flounder and waste your time if you don’t bother to read it.
Before you begin to read, however, take a quick glance over the chapter or
section to get a sense of what it’s about.
8. Not checking
with your instructors or classmates to clear up points of confusion. Professors are used to lost students coming in
for guidance—it’s our job to help you. The students we worry about are the ones
who don’t come in. Don’t be one of those students.
9. Thinking you can
learn deeply when you are being constantly distracted. Every tiny pull toward an instant message or
conversation means you have less brain power to devote to learning. Every tug
of interrupted attention pulls out tiny neural roots before they can grow.
10. Not getting
enough sleep. Your brain
pieces together problem-solving techniques when you sleep, and it also
practices and repeats whatever you put in mind before you go to sleep. Prolonged
fatigue allows toxins to build up in the brain that disrupt the neural
connections you need to think quickly and well. If you don’t get a good sleep
before a test, NOTHING ELSE YOU HAVE DONE WILL MATTER.
Excerpted from A
Mind for Numbers: How to Excel in Math and Science (Even if You Flunked
Algebra), by Barbara Oakley, Penguin, July, 2014
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