How to Easily Remember Everything You Read, According to Science

8 practical strategies.

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We’ve all been there. You sit down to read a book, and the next thing you know, you’re at the end and you can’t remember a thing. It’s frustrating, but it doesn’t have to be that way. There are plenty of techniques you can use to help remember everything you read.

In this article, we’ll explore some of those techniques and discuss how they can help improve your reading comprehension. So whether you’re struggling with a textbook for class or just want to get more out of your fiction novels, keep reading for helpful tips on how to remember everything you read.

Use the “Generation Effect.”

When you stop reading, your brain starts planning its response to whatever you just read. And your brain does this by taking the new information that you just read and comparing it to all of the old information that you already know.

This is how we begin to understand what we’re reading; we compare what we’re currently reading with things that we’ve already learned in the past.

Therefore, as soon as you come across something new, you should stop and write about it. Whether by hand or on a computer, this will help you to synthesize the new information with all of your…

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