The smartest students at Harvard and Stanford aren't smarter than you.
They just stopped studying the way that feels good and started studying the way the brain actually works.
10 techniques their professors actually teach:
1/ Stop confusing familiarity with memory.
Jessie Schwab at Harvard says it plainly: memorization feels like learning, but you probably haven't processed it deeply enough to remember it hours later.
That warm feeling of "I know this" is the exact lie that makes you blank on the exam.
2/ The gym test.
Rereading your notes is like watching someone else lift weights. Testing yourself is actually lifting.
Researchers call this "desirable difficulties." The struggle of pulling an answer from memory IS the learning. Comfort isn't.
3/ Close the book and rebuild it.
After you read, shut the material and summarize it from memory. The strain of retrieval is what carves the memory in.
Reading it a second time feels productive. It's just familiarity wearing a costume.
4/ Prime before you read.
Before a new chapter, write down what you already know and what you expect to learn.
This makes your brain treat new information as an update to something, not a cold file dropped into an empty folder. Connected facts stick. Isolated ones vanish.
5/ Take notes on connections, not definitions.
Your brain stores isolated facts terribly. It stores relationships between ideas extremely well.
So stop copying definitions. Write down what each new idea links to, contradicts, or extends.
6/ Add one word: "yet."
Carol Dweck at Stanford proved this measurably changes how long students push on hard problems.
"I don't understand this" is a closed verdict.
"I don't understand this yet" is an open investigation. Same fact. Different brain.
7/ Treat effort as the mechanism, not the verdict.
A fixed mindset reads "this is hard" as proof you're not talented.
A growth mindset reads the same struggle as the exact process that builds talent. The work didn't change. The story you tell about it did.
8/ Teach it within 24 hours.
Tracey Tokuhama-Espinosa, a Harvard neuroscientist, tells students to teach what they learned to someone else within a day.
Teaching forces you to find the gaps in your understanding before the exam finds them for you.
9/ Use as many senses as you can.
The "I'm a visual learner" idea isn't supported by modern neuroscience.
Your brain wants every sense firing at once, because each one builds a separate pathway to the same knowledge. More pathways means faster, stronger recall.
10/ Ask "feed-forward," not "what went wrong."
When you get something wrong, don't sit in the failure.
Ask one question: what would I do differently next time? That single reframe keeps your brain in a learning state instead of a defensive one.
The real litmus test.
Tokuhama-Espinosa says the true test of learning isn't remembering something for an exam.
It's using it in a brand new context. If you can only repeat it, you memorized it. If you can apply it somewhere new, you actually learned it.
None of this requires being a genius.
The students who remember everything aren't studying harder.
They're studying the way the brain was built to.
Most people never figure out the difference. Now you have.
If you made it this far, you're exactly who The Shift is for. And it's free.
Every weekday, we break down one AI tool, strategy, or breakthrough. In under 5 minutes.
Plus, get access 3,000+ AI tools, and 500+ mega prompts when you join.
AI can now teach you any subject the way Richard Feynman taught physics at Caltech (for free).
These 12 Claude prompts replace the $200/hr tutor your parents couldn't afford.
(bookmark this. your grades will thank you)
1/ The Feynman Explainer
Prompt to copy:
"Act like Richard Feynman teaching me [subject/topic]. Explain it using simple language, vivid analogies, and real-world examples. Start with the intuition before formulas or definitions. Assume I’m smart but completely new to this. After explaining, ask me 3 questions to check if I truly understand it."
This has helped me turn confusing topics into things I can actually explain out loud.
2/ The “Teach Me Like I’m 12” Tutor
Prompt to copy:
"Teach me [topic] like I’m 12 years old, but don’t dumb it down. Use short explanations, simple examples, and step-by-step logic. Whenever you introduce a new term, define it immediately. End with a mini summary and one simple practice question I should be able to answer."
This has helped me learn hard concepts without getting buried in textbook language.
Whenever a book feels important but impossible to finish, I use NotebookLM as my reading partner.
It explains the ideas, challenges the author, and shows me what actually matters.
Here are the 5 prompts I run on every book 👇
1. The Brutal Summary That Actually Sticks
Prompt: "You are a brutally honest reading coach. I uploaded [book title]. Give me the 5 ideas that actually matter. Skip everything the author repeats for padding. For each idea, give me one sentence on what it is and one sentence on why it changes something in my life."
Most book summaries give you everything. This gives you only what survives.
2. The Argument Extractor
Prompt: "What is the single core argument this book is making? State it in one sentence. Then tell me the 3 strongest pieces of evidence the author uses to prove it, and the 1 place where the argument feels weakest."
You will understand the book better than most people who finished it the normal way.
If you died tomorrow, your family would spend 6-18 months trying to access your:
- Bank accounts
- Crypto wallets
- Cloud storage
- Password manager
- Social media
Most would never succeed.
Here's your 7-step digital death checklist:
STEP 1: Build your master account list
Sit down and list every account you own.
Bank accounts. Investment accounts. Crypto wallets. Email. Social media. Cloud storage. Streaming. Subscriptions. Password manager. Work accounts.
The average person has 80. You probably can't name 30 off the top of your head.
That gap is the problem.
STEP 2: Store it somewhere your family can actually find
Not in your will.
Wills become public record during probate. Listing your passwords in a will means every password you own is visible to anyone who pulls the court file.
That is not a plan. That is a security breach.
Use a password manager with emergency access built in (1Password and Bitwarden both have this).
Or a sealed envelope in a home safe with clear instructions on where the envelope is.
A PhD student told me he uses NotebookLM to reverse-engineer how professors think.
He uploads years of course material, past papers, lecture slides, reading lists, and assignment briefs into NotebookLM.
Then he asks 5 prompts.
By exam season, he understands the professor better than students who attended every lecture.
I thought that sounded ridiculous.
Then I saw the workflow.
Here’s the exact system:
1. The Obsession Finder
Every professor has recurring intellectual patterns.
Certain themes.
Certain frameworks.
Certain questions they keep returning to.
Paste this first:
“Analyze all course materials. What ideas, theories, examples, or debates does this professor repeatedly emphasize across years?”
This is the first unlock.
Because repetition reveals priorities.
And priorities shape exams.
2. The Thinking Style Prompt
Some professors reward memorization.
Others reward synthesis.
Others punish shallow answers instantly.
Paste:
“Based on these materials, how does this professor appear to think? What kind of reasoning do they respect? What kind of answers would they consider weak or superficial?”