You've got the pastel highlighters. The aesthetic notebook with the dotted grid. Hours of rewriting lecture notes until they look Instagram-worthy.
And you're still bombing exams.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: the time you spend making your notes look pretty is actively hurting your grades. That beautifully color-coded chapter summary? Your brain barely processed it. Those hours of "studying" were actually hours of sophisticated procrastination disguised as productivity.
Let's talk about why this happens and what actually works instead.
There's a reason StudyTok is full of satisfying note-taking videos. They're calming. They feel productive. You can post them and get validation from strangers.
But feeling productive and being productive are two very different things.
Research from cognitive psychology has shown this over and over: passive review (reading, rewriting, highlighting) creates an illusion of learning without actual retention. You recognize the material when you see it, so you think you know it. Then the exam asks you to recall it from scratch, and suddenly your mind goes blank.
This is called the fluency illusion. The more familiar something looks, the more you think you've learned it. But recognition isn't the same as recall.
When you're rewriting notes in your own handwriting with your own color scheme, you're creating maximum familiarity with minimum actual learning.
The science is clear on what works: active recall and spaced repetition.
Active recall means forcing your brain to retrieve information rather than just reviewing it. Instead of reading your notes about cellular respiration, you close them and try to explain the process from memory. The struggle of retrieval is where learning happens.
Spaced repetition means reviewing material at increasing intervals over time. Cramming the night before creates short-term memory that evaporates within days. Spacing out your practice builds durable long-term memory.
Neither of these things involve highlighters. Neither of them look pretty. They feel harder because they are harder, and that difficulty is the point.
Let's do some math on the "aesthetic notes" approach.
A typical 75-minute lecture contains maybe 15-20 key concepts. If you're rewriting and color-coding all your notes, you're spending maybe 2-3 hours per lecture creating study materials.
For a 5-class course load with 3 lectures per week each, that's 30-45 hours per week just on note beautification. Before any actual studying happens.
Now consider the alternative: you upload your lecture recording or slides to a tool like Snitchnotes, get organized notes automatically, and immediately start quizzing yourself on the content. That same 75-minute lecture becomes maybe 90 minutes total, with most of that time spent on active practice rather than passive rewriting.
The students who seem to effortlessly maintain high GPAs aren't working harder than you. They're working on the right things. They're testing themselves instead of highlighting. They're spacing their practice instead of cramming. They're spending their limited study time on activities that actually build memory.
If you've built your entire study identity around beautiful notes, this might feel personal. That's okay. Recognizing a problem is the first step.
Here's how to transition:
Week 1: Stop rewriting entirely. Your lecture notes are fine as they are. Messy is okay. Incomplete is okay. The goal is having content to study, not creating art.
Week 2: Replace highlighting with questions. Every time you'd reach for a highlighter, write a question instead. "What are the three types of RNA?" is more useful than a yellow stripe over that sentence.
Week 3: Test before you review. Before looking at any notes, try to write down everything you remember about the topic. Only then check what you missed. This is called a "brain dump" and it's one of the most effective study techniques that exists.
Week 4: Use tools that automate the boring parts. You don't have to organize and structure your notes manually. Snitchnotes can turn your lecture recordings, slides, or textbook photos into clean study materials and generate quizzes automatically. This frees up your time for what matters: actual practice and retrieval.
Here's what I want you to internalize: the students with the ugliest notes often have the highest grades.
They understood something important early on. The goal isn't having perfect study materials. The goal is knowing the material.
No one at graduation asks to see your notebooks. No employer cares about your highlighter collection. The only thing that matters is whether you actually learned.
So next time you feel the urge to spend three hours making your notes Instagram-worthy, ask yourself: is this helping me learn, or is this helping me avoid the harder work of actually studying?
You already know the answer.
If you want to break the cycle, here's your homework: take your messiest set of lecture notes and quiz yourself on them right now. Don't rewrite them first. Don't organize them. Just close them and try to recall the key points.
That uncomfortable feeling of struggling to remember? That's learning happening.
And if you want to skip the note organization entirely and jump straight to effective practice, try Snitchnotes for free at snitchnotes.com. Upload your lecture, get instant notes and quizzes, and spend your time on what actually matters.
Notes, quizzes, podcasts, flashcards, and chat — from one upload.
Try your first note free