Study skills for success

Far too many people study harder rather than smarter and end up burning out. Sitting and passing exams is supposed to get you ahead in life – not make you tense and a nervous wreck.

With simple and effective techniques, you can massively increase your ability to pass exams. Here is a quick sample:

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  • Use lots of colour. Using colour in note taking and study will increase your ability to remember and recall information. It makes your notes more exciting to reread and learn. Use felt pens of different thicknesses, coloured pencils and crayons. Use your favourite colours; highlight key information, and make note taking fun.

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  • Talk about information as much as possible. When you say information out loud, it is reinforced in the brain. Have you ever asked someone to remind you to do something? Do they usually need to remind you? Not usually. When you say something out loud it comes out of your month and back into the brain through your ears. Talk about the information you are learning to yourself, friends, family or even the dog. Just say it out loud.
  • Study at my best thinking time. Are you a morning, afternoon or late night person? Study when you are most alert. If you prefer to stay up late at night, study at this time. One of the worst times to study is the one hour after school. Take time to refresh and relax before doing homework or study.
  • Study the information I don’t know. This may sound obvious and is a major key to successful study. Take out old test and exam papers and learn the information you got wrong. When you get your test marks back, celebrate if you have a pass mark. However, it is the questions you got wrong that are the most important to learn. This is how you will improve.
  • Study for 20 minutes and take a five minute break. Having short study times increases the retention of information and avoids the brain “chunking out” or forgetting. During a five-minute break, eat brain food, get some fresh air, or do some quick exercise to keep the blood and oxygen flowing to the brain. Always leave your study environment during this five minute break to give the brain some variety and a change of focus.

    Frame important information. Putting a frame around information makes the brain focus within the frame and can raise comprehension. This is such a simple strategy and it works. If you are a doodler and often draw all over the page when listening or thinking, doodle frames around the edge of the page. It will increase your ability to recall and remember the information within the frame.

    Review my notes one day after learning them. Reviewing or periodically revising of material is needed to reactivate the stored memories and prevent information being buried under other data. The more recent, regular and fun the review is, the easier it will be to recall. Research shows if you go over your notes the next day, your recall can stay at up to 90 percent. However, waiting three days before you re-visit your notes drops recall down to 30 percent.

    For more study tips please send an email to  studytips@spectrumeducation.com and request our complimentary fortnightly study tip.

    KArEN BOyES

    “ Use your favourite colours; highlight key information, and make note taking fun. ”

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Karen Tui Boyes


Karen Tui Boyes is a champion for LifeLong Learning. A multi-award-winning speaker, educator and businesswoman, she is an expert in effective teaching, learning, study skills, motivation and positive thinking. Karen is the CEO of Spectrum Education, Principal of Spectrum Online Academy and the author of 10 books. She loves empowering teachers, parents and students and is the wife to one and the mother of two young adults.
Karen was named the GIFEW Evolutionary Woman of the Year 2022.