How to Learn Anything Faster Than Everyone Else

How to Learn Anything Faster Than Everyone Else

Photo of author, Vertech EditorialVertech Editorial Mar 3, 2026 0 min read
Photo of author, Vertech Editorial

Vertech Editorial

Mar 3, 2026

Speed-learning is not about shortcuts. It is about eliminating the habits that slow you down and replacing them with what actually works.

The students who learn fastest are not the ones who study the most hours. They are the ones who waste the fewest. Most students spend 60-70% of their study time on activities that produce almost zero lasting learning - re-reading, highlighting, copying notes. When you cut those out, the same material takes a fraction of the time.

This is not about hacks or tricks. It is about understanding how memory actually works and aligning your study methods with the science. Here is the streamlined approach.

The 80/20 of Study Methods

Decades of cognitive science research points to two techniques that consistently outperform everything else: active recall (testing yourself) and spaced repetition (spreading review over time). Everything else is either a variation of these two or dramatically less effective.

High-Impact Methods

  • Self-quizzing from memory (active recall)
  • Flashcards with spaced repetition
  • Practice problems under exam conditions
  • Teaching the concept to someone else
  • Writing explanations from scratch

Low-Impact Methods (Time Sinks)

  • Re-reading textbook chapters
  • Highlighting or underlining text
  • Copying notes word-for-word
  • Watching lectures at 2x without pausing
  • Making aesthetically perfect notes

The Fast-Learning Loop

1

Learn the concept once - read the section, watch the lecture, or have AI explain it. Once. Not three times.

2

Test yourself immediately - close everything and try to recall what you just learned. Write it down, say it aloud, or solve a related problem.

3

Identify the gaps - check what you got wrong or could not recall. Those gaps are your study priorities. Everything else is already handled.

4

Revisit only the gaps - do not re-study what you already know. Spend 100% of round two on the material you struggled with in round one.

The speed comes from elimination

Fast learners do not cover more material per hour. They stop wasting time on material they already understand and focus ruthlessly on what they do not. That is the entire secret.

AI makes step 2 and 3 almost effortless. Paste your notes into the Pocket Quiz prompt and let it generate questions. The ones you miss are your study targets. For the deeper version of this method, our post on the simplest way to become good at learning covers the foundational mindset shift.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is not re-reading useful for anything?
Re-reading can help if you are re-reading a specific section you know you did not understand the first time. But re-reading an entire chapter “just to review” is one of the least efficient uses of your time. Test yourself first, then re-read only the parts you got wrong.
How do I know if I am actually learning and not just feeling productive?
Close everything and try to explain the concept out loud or on paper without looking at anything. If you can, you learned it. If you cannot, you were just reviewing without encoding. This is the most honest test of actual learning.
How many hours a day should I study with this method?
Start with 2-3 focused hours. Active recall is mentally intense - it is harder than passive reading, which is why it works. Most students find that 3 hours of active study covers what used to take 5-6 hours of passive studying.