Learning – Ways to Actually Remember Things (Not Just Read Them!)
We’ve all been there…
You read a page.
You nod wisely.
You turn the page…
…and instantly forget everything you just “learnt”.
That’s not learning. That’s polite page turning.
Real learning means getting information into your brain so that it actually stays there long enough to use in an exam—or better still, in real life.
So here are some methods that genuinely work.
1. Spaced Repetition – The “Don’t Cram Like a Maniac” Method
Your brain forgets things on a curve (thanks, science).
Instead of cramming:
- Learn it today
- Review tomorrow
- Review in 3 days
- Then a week later
Each time you revisit it, the memory gets stronger.
This is why flashcards work so well—especially when used properly.
2. Active Recall – The “Test Yourself First” Trick
Don’t just read notes.
Close the book and ask:
- “What do I remember?”
- “Can I explain this out loud?”
If you can’t recall it, you don’t know it.
This is uncomfortable… but incredibly effective.
3. The Leitner Flashcard System
This is a clever upgrade on flashcards:
- Get it right → card moves to a less frequent box
- Get it wrong → back to the start
You spend more time on what you don’t know.
👉 Efficient and slightly ruthless—just like a good teacher.
4. Mnemonics – Silly Works
Your brain loves nonsense.
Examples:
- “OIL RIG” → Oxidation Is Loss, Reduction Is Gain
- “Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain” → colours of the rainbow
The sillier, the better.
If it makes you laugh, you’ll remember it.
5. Mind Maps – See the Big Picture
Instead of pages of notes:
- Put the topic in the centre
- Branch out ideas
- Link concepts together
Great for:
- Essays
- Big topics (Biology, Psychology, Sociology)
Helps students like Nia who understand ideas but need structure.
6. Write It Out (Yes, Really)
Typing is fast.
Writing is powerful.
When you write:
- Your brain processes information more deeply
- You remember more Old-fashioned… but it works.
7. Teach Someone Else
The ultimate test:
“Explain it to someone who knows nothing.”
If you can:
-
You understand it
If you can’t: - You’ve found your weak spot
Even teaching the dog works (they’re excellent listeners). I know they are waiting for the word walkies but ...
8. Mix It Up (Interleaving)
Don’t do:
- 20 identical maths questions in a row
Instead:
- Mix topics together
This forces your brain to choose the right method, not just repeat a pattern.
9. Short Bursts Beat Long Slogs
Try:
- 20 minutes learning
- 5 minutes break
(You’ve even tested this with juggling!)
Your brain needs rest to store information.
Final Thought
Learning isn’t about time spent…
It’s about what your brain actually keeps.
If you:
- Test yourself
- Space it out
- Use active methods
You’ll remember far more—and feel far less stressed.


