💡 : Productivity isn't about the amount of time spent "at the desk," but about the quality of the cognitive signals you send to your brain.
Self-testing is a powerful tool for memory because it forces active retrieval, which signals to the brain that the info is vital.
Changing your physical location while studying creates more "neural anchors" for the information.
Learning continues even when we aren't focused on the task. Concepts like and Percolation suggest that walking away from a difficult problem allows the subconscious to continue working on it, often leading to "Aha!" moments. Similarly, Sleep is essential for memory consolidation, as the brain replays and organizes the day's data during various sleep cycles.
Benedict Carey’s How We Learn challenges traditional notions of "good" study habits, arguing that the brain is a biological organ that thrives on variety and strategic forgetting rather than rigid discipline. By understanding how the brain encodes and retrieves information, learners can work with their biology rather than against it. The Role of Forgetting
![]() |
|
|




