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How to remember everything for exams: 5 proven study methods

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 13, 2025, 07:51 IST
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Your brain feels like it has hit the delete button during exams? Don’t worry

Exams are stressful. You can spend hours reading, highlighting, and rewriting your notes, yet when it comes time to recall the material, your brain feels like it hit the delete button. If that sounds familiar, don’t worry, you’re not alone. Tons of students struggle with remembering what they study. The good news? You don’t have to pull all-nighters or rely on luck to ace your exams. With the right strategies, your brain can actually absorb and hold onto information so you can recall it when it matters most.
Here are five proven study methods that actually work—and won’t make you want to cry over your textbooks.

2/6

Active recall: Don’t just read, retrieve

Reading and re-reading your notes feels productive, but it’s actually one of the least effective ways to remember stuff. Instead, try active recall. Close the book, put your notes aside, and ask yourself questions about the topic. Try explaining it in your own words. Even better, pretend you’re teaching someone else.
Why it works: your brain remembers things better when it actively retrieves information instead of just passively scanning it. Every time you successfully recall something, you’re strengthening that mental pathway. Flashcards work, sure, but you can also just write summaries from memory or quiz yourself, it’s all about forcing your brain to pull information out, not just look at it.

3/6

Teach someone else: Your brain loves explaining

Ever notice how you understand something way better after explaining it to a friend? That’s not a coincidence. Teaching someone else is one of the fastest ways to lock in knowledge. You’re forced to organize your thoughts, spot gaps in your understanding, and really make sense of the material.
Don’t worry if you don’t have an audience. Talk out loud to yourself, explain it to a pet, or even record yourself on your phone. It may feel a little weird, but your brain will thank you. This method makes abstract or tricky topics suddenly click—and stick.

4/6

Mnemonics and memory tricks: Make learning fun

Mnemonics are like little memory shortcuts. They turn complicated information into something your brain can easily hold onto. Acronyms, rhymes, silly stories, or colorful visual images can all make memorization much easier.
Example: to remember the planets, you might use “My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Nachos.” Sounds funny, right? But it works. The more vivid, unusual, or even ridiculous the association, the stronger it sticks in your memory. Play with colors, patterns, or cartoons ,anything that makes the info pop in your mind.

5/6

Practice with past papers: Test yourself, don’t guess

There’s a reason teachers hand out past papers: practicing with them is pure gold. It forces you to recall information in context, get used to the types of questions you might face, and spot areas you’re shaky on.
Go through the papers like it’s the real exam. When you get something wrong, don’t just move on, review why, figure out what you missed, and make a note to revisit that topic. This method isn’t just about memorizing answers; it’s about building confidence and mental muscle for exam day.

6/6

Take breaks and sleep: Your brain needs downtime

No study hack can replace rest. Your brain literally consolidates memories while you sleep. Pulling all-nighters might feel productive, but in reality, it erases a lot of what you tried to learn. Aim for 7–8 hours of quality sleep, especially during exam season.
Breaks matter too. The Pomodoro technique, study for 25–30 minutes, then take a 5-minute break, keeps your focus sharp and prevents burnout. Move around, grab a snack, or stretch. Those small pauses make your brain more receptive when you go back to studying.
Learning doesn’t have to be painful. With the right strategies, it can be efficient, effective, and even a little fun.

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