You're Not Behind. You're Just Studying Without Feedback.
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Today I want to talk to the student who feels like they're studying all the time but still doesn't feel confident.
You know the feeling. You put in the hours. You're not lazy — you're doing the work. And yet there's this constant low hum of "it's not sticking" and "I'm behind." I want to offer you a completely different explanation, because I don't think you have a time problem. I think you have a feedback problem.
Here's the trap. Passive studying feels productive. Reading your notes, re-watching a lecture, highlighting, rewriting your slides into prettier slides — all of it feels like progress. Your hand is moving, your eyes are on the material, time is passing. So your brain rewards you: "Good job, we studied." You walk away feeling like you did something.
But tests reveal what actually stuck. A topic can make complete sense while you're watching someone explain it — and feel like a foreign language the second it shows up as a question with four answers that all look right. Recognizing information is not the same as knowing it. And passive studying only ever trains recognition.