[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":348},["ShallowReactive",2],{"navigation":3,"/blog/active-recall-vs-rereading":48,"/blog/active-recall-vs-rereading-surround":337},[4,23],{"title":5,"path":6,"stem":7,"children":8,"icon":22},"Getting Started","/docs/getting-started","1.docs/1.getting-started/1.index",[9,12,17],{"title":10,"path":6,"stem":7,"icon":11},"Introduction","i-lucide-house",{"title":13,"path":14,"stem":15,"icon":16},"Installation","/docs/getting-started/installation","1.docs/1.getting-started/2.installation","i-lucide-download",{"title":18,"path":19,"stem":20,"icon":21},"Usage","/docs/getting-started/usage","1.docs/1.getting-started/3.usage","i-lucide-sliders",false,{"title":24,"path":25,"stem":26,"children":27,"page":22},"Essentials","/docs/essentials","1.docs/2.essentials",[28,33,38,43],{"title":29,"path":30,"stem":31,"icon":32},"Markdown Syntax","/docs/essentials/markdown-syntax","1.docs/2.essentials/1.markdown-syntax","i-lucide-heading-1",{"title":34,"path":35,"stem":36,"icon":37},"Code Blocks","/docs/essentials/code-blocks","1.docs/2.essentials/2.code-blocks","i-lucide-code-xml",{"title":39,"path":40,"stem":41,"icon":42},"Prose Components","/docs/essentials/prose-components","1.docs/2.essentials/3.prose-components","i-lucide-component",{"title":44,"path":45,"stem":46,"icon":47},"Images and Embeds","/docs/essentials/images-embeds","1.docs/2.essentials/4.images-embeds","i-lucide-image",{"id":49,"title":50,"authors":51,"badge":57,"body":59,"date":326,"description":327,"extension":328,"image":329,"meta":331,"navigation":332,"path":333,"seo":334,"stem":335,"__hash__":336},"posts/3.blog/5.active-recall-vs-rereading.md","Why Re-Reading Is Killing Your Exam Prep (and What to Do Instead)",[52],{"name":53,"to":54,"avatar":55},"Quizify Team","/blog",{"src":56},"https://i.pravatar.cc/128?u=quizify",{"label":58},"Study Tips",{"type":60,"value":61,"toc":310},"minimark",[62,67,97,108,115,122,126,133,149,152,155,170,177,184,188,193,196,200,207,210,214,217,221,224,239,242,246,249,275,278,282,285,294,298,304],[63,64,66],"h2",{"id":65},"the-most-popular-study-technique-is-also-the-worst","The most popular study technique is also the worst",[68,69,70,71,75,76,80,81,84,85,88,89,92,93,96],"p",{},"A 2013 paper in ",[72,73,74],"em",{},"Psychological Science in the Public Interest"," reviewed every major study technique in the cognitive-science literature. The two techniques students use most — ",[77,78,79],"strong",{},"re-reading"," and ",[77,82,83],{},"highlighting"," — were rated as the ",[77,86,87],{},"least effective",". The two techniques almost no student uses — ",[77,90,91],{},"active recall"," (also called retrieval practice) and ",[77,94,95],{},"spaced repetition"," — were rated as the most effective.",[68,98,99,100,103,104,107],{},"This isn't new science. The \"testing effect\" was first documented in 1909. We've known for over a century that pulling information ",[72,101,102],{},"out"," of your memory is more effective than putting it ",[72,105,106],{},"in",". Yet most students still spend exam prep re-reading the textbook.",[68,109,110,111,114],{},"Why? Because re-reading ",[77,112,113],{},"feels productive",". You finish a chapter, you remember what it said, you experience a fluency illusion. Active recall is uncomfortable — you sit there trying to remember and you can't, and that discomfort feels like failure.",[68,116,117,118,121],{},"It's not failure. The discomfort ",[72,119,120],{},"is"," the learning. The act of struggling to retrieve is what strengthens the memory.",[63,123,125],{"id":124},"what-active-recall-actually-means","What active recall actually means",[68,127,128,129,132],{},"Active recall is the practice of ",[77,130,131],{},"forcing your brain to retrieve information without looking at the source",". Concretely:",[134,135,136,140,143,146],"ul",{},[137,138,139],"li",{},"Close the textbook. Try to summarize the chapter from memory.",[137,141,142],{},"Cover the answer side of a flashcard. Try to produce the answer before you flip it.",[137,144,145],{},"Take a practice quiz on material you just read.",[137,147,148],{},"Explain the concept out loud as if teaching it to a friend.",[68,150,151],{},"Each of these creates a retrieval event — a tiny test where your brain has to find and pull up the information. Every retrieval strengthens the memory pathway. Every re-reading does almost nothing.",[68,153,154],{},"The single most-cited study on this comes from Karpicke & Roediger (2008). Students learned a list of vocabulary in four conditions:",[156,157,158,161,164,167],"ol",{},[137,159,160],{},"Studied four times.",[137,162,163],{},"Studied three times, tested once.",[137,165,166],{},"Studied twice, tested twice.",[137,168,169],{},"Studied once, tested three times.",[68,171,172,173,176],{},"After a one-week delay, ",[77,174,175],{},"the students who tested most remembered the most"," — by a margin of about 80% to 30%. The students who only re-studied performed worst.",[68,178,179,180,183],{},"Let that sink in: spending the same amount of time, but on retrieval instead of re-reading, almost ",[77,181,182],{},"tripled"," what students remembered a week later.",[63,185,187],{"id":186},"the-three-techniques-that-actually-work","The three techniques that actually work",[189,190,192],"h3",{"id":191},"_1-active-recall-retrieval-practice","1. Active recall (retrieval practice)",[68,194,195],{},"The headline technique. Replace re-reading with practice quizzes wherever possible. After every chapter, before you move on, take a quiz on what you just read — even if you wrote your own questions. The act of generating an answer is what builds the memory.",[189,197,199],{"id":198},"_2-spaced-repetition","2. Spaced repetition",[68,201,202,203,206],{},"Don't review material on a fixed schedule. Review it on an ",[72,204,205],{},"expanding"," schedule — once after a day, once after three days, once after a week, once after two weeks. Every successful retrieval pushes the next review further out. This is exactly how memory consolidation works: a memory you retrieved a week after learning is much more durable than one you retrieved an hour later.",[68,208,209],{},"Apps like Anki implement this automatically. The principle works without an app — just keep a sheet that tracks when you last reviewed each chapter and when the next review is due.",[189,211,213],{"id":212},"_3-interleaving","3. Interleaving",[68,215,216],{},"Don't study one topic to mastery, then move to the next. Mix topics within a single session: 20 minutes of Topic A, 20 minutes of Topic B, 20 minutes of Topic A again. Interleaving feels harder (because each context-switch is uncomfortable), but it produces dramatically better retention than blocked practice.",[63,218,220],{"id":219},"why-exam-prep-is-the-perfect-setting-for-these-techniques","Why exam prep is the perfect setting for these techniques",[68,222,223],{},"Most studying is open-ended — you're learning a new field, you don't know what's important. Exam prep is the opposite: there's a defined syllabus, a defined question style, a defined day when you'll be tested. This makes it the ideal setting for active recall, because:",[134,225,226,229,232],{},[137,227,228],{},"The \"questions\" are pre-defined by the exam syllabus.",[137,230,231],{},"You know exactly when the final test is.",[137,233,234,235,238],{},"Your retrieval is ",[77,236,237],{},"calibrated"," to the actual test format.",[68,240,241],{},"You don't have to design your own quizzes — you can use the question style of the real exam. This is why scenario-based practice tools beat generic flashcards for exam prep: the retrieval format matches the exam format.",[63,243,245],{"id":244},"what-to-actually-do-this-week","What to actually do this week",[68,247,248],{},"If you have an exam coming up and you've been re-reading your notes, here's the swap:",[156,250,251,257,263,269],{},[137,252,253,256],{},[77,254,255],{},"Stop re-reading."," Cap re-reading time at 20% of your study time, used only for material you can't retrieve.",[137,258,259,262],{},[77,260,261],{},"Take a practice quiz every study session."," It doesn't matter if you fail — failure is the point. Each retrieval is a memory event.",[137,264,265,268],{},[77,266,267],{},"Track which topics you fail."," Spend 70% of your remaining study time on those topics. The other 30% on light review of strong topics so they don't decay.",[137,270,271,274],{},[77,272,273],{},"Space out your sessions."," Two 30-minute sessions a day apart beat one 60-minute session.",[68,276,277],{},"This is, mechanically, the entire science of exam prep. There is no advanced layer. The reason most students don't do this is that re-reading feels comfortable and active recall feels hard. Pick the hard one.",[63,279,281],{"id":280},"how-quizify-implements-active-recall","How Quizify implements active recall",[68,283,284],{},"Every quiz Quizify generates is, by design, a retrieval event. Every question is a small test of whether you can produce the right answer from the relevant rule or fact. The per-topic analytics implement spaced repetition crudely — they tell you which topics are weak, so you know what to drill again.",[68,286,287,288,293],{},"For exam prep specifically, ",[289,290,292],"a",{"href":291},"/exams/pmp","Quizify's curated tracks"," are calibrated to the exam's actual question style. That matters because your retrieval should match the format you'll be tested in. If you're going to take a scenario-based PMP exam, drilling fact-recall flashcards will leave you under-prepared. If you're taking a fill-in-the-blank Goethe A1 exam, doing translation drills won't transfer.",[63,295,297],{"id":296},"the-bottom-line","The bottom line",[68,299,300,301,303],{},"Fifty years of cognitive science is clear: re-reading is the worst common study technique, and active recall is the best. The reason most students don't switch is that retrieval is uncomfortable in the moment. The reason you should switch is that the discomfort ",[72,302,120],{}," the learning.",[68,305,306],{},[289,307,309],{"href":308},"/signup","Start retrieval-practice drills with Quizify →",{"title":311,"searchDepth":312,"depth":312,"links":313},"",2,[314,315,316,322,323,324,325],{"id":65,"depth":312,"text":66},{"id":124,"depth":312,"text":125},{"id":186,"depth":312,"text":187,"children":317},[318,320,321],{"id":191,"depth":319,"text":192},3,{"id":198,"depth":319,"text":199},{"id":212,"depth":319,"text":213},{"id":219,"depth":312,"text":220},{"id":244,"depth":312,"text":245},{"id":280,"depth":312,"text":281},{"id":296,"depth":312,"text":297},"2026-03-18T00:00:00.000Z","Re-reading and highlighting are the most popular study techniques and the least effective. Here's the evidence, and the three techniques that actually work — backed by 50 years of cognitive science.","md",{"src":330},"https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1508962914676-134849a727f0?q=80&w=1200&h=400&auto=format&fit=crop",{},true,"/blog/active-recall-vs-rereading",{"title":50,"description":327},"3.blog/5.active-recall-vs-rereading","c0mxtmonMkKyen3s-XuF33iQOsnVZj43ze5SjIbKnPY",[338,343],{"title":339,"path":340,"stem":341,"description":342,"children":-1},"Dativ vs Akkusativ: The Single Most Confusing Thing About German A2","/blog/dativ-vs-akkusativ","3.blog/4.dativ-vs-akkusativ","When does 'dem' beat 'den', and why? A practical guide to choosing the right case in German A2 — including the dative-verb list, two-way prepositions, and the trap that catches every learner.",{"title":344,"path":345,"stem":346,"description":347,"children":-1},"Can AI Actually Help You Pass an Exam? Here's What Works and What Doesn't","/blog/ai-exam-prep-truth","3.blog/6.ai-exam-prep-truth","AI exam-prep tools are everywhere. Most are useless, some are dangerous, and a few are genuinely transformative. Here's an honest breakdown — what to use, what to avoid, and what to look for.",1778068348770]