Is there anyone here who has become proficient at doing this? When my brother went through med school he said he learned to do well by simply reading the material and understanding it rather than wasting time on flash cards or outlines. I'm doing OK, but not amazing. I feel like I waste a lot of time on that kind of stuff and I wonder if it's even worth it.
For those who have success with simply reading the powerpoints/books, what methods do you employ to be sure you're actively learning it and not just "thinking" you are when you read through?
I HAVE THE SAME EXACT QUESTION! There are people who keep advocating this read the lecture notes idea but I'd really like to know how...I can read something multiple times and still will not retain it.
I wanna know how the combat the:
Sequence bias (memorize things in the sequence they learn in it)
Actively test themself while re-reading...
Is it just a matter of reading so many times that it's memorized (I feel that would take me 10+ times)?
Someone here brought up the idea of quizzing yourself before advancing to the next slide and this is good for an initial pass but it's very time consuming for me when most of the pages contain 50 + details I don't know.
I'm just so all over the place with study strategies (I switch every unit almost) and I've been doing ok to above average but like, idk....ideally id have liked to have settled on one so I could master it.
Some ways I try to incorporate active elements without going too overboard:
1) numbering each minutiae I couldn't recal on a page and going back to them in a random order (very logistically difficult mind you)
2) writing questions on each page in The margin that I'd have to answer to move on.
3) pharm has to a,ways be flashcards..
...
For those who do ANKI, idk how you do it because in order to do it properly as described by many others, you'd need 180 cards or more per lecture (I know because I tried once and it wasn't a heavy lecture) and then on top of that, anti is not designed for more than 40+ cards a day.