
If you ever finish a study session and still don’t get it, this is for you.
I used to reread notes for hours and remember almost nothing—until I built a 6-step method that actually sticks.
It’s called the SNITCH Method™, and here’s how it works 👇
Explaining = Understanding.
When you summarize a concept in your own words, you’re not just recalling — you’re reconstructing it.
This is the core of the Feynman Technique: if you can’t explain something simply, you don’t understand it yet.
👉 How to do it:
After each video, lecture, or reading, open a Snitchnote and write:
“If I had to teach this to a 12-year-old, I’d say…”
Keep it short. Clarity beats detail. This builds surface understanding, which Hattie found is the first step toward deep learning (effect size 0.66).
Your brain remembers what it builds.
Copying text tricks you into thinking you’re learning. Instead, transform information — turn it into bullets, diagrams, or doodles.
👉 In Snitchnotes:
Use bullets for structure, add emojis for visuals, or connect related notes.
This mimics guided practice — every transformation is a mini rehearsal for memory.
Bonus: Reorganizing your notes in your own way is one of the highest-yield study habits.
Fluency is a trap. Rereading gives you the illusion of mastery.
Instead, test yourself early — and often. Identify what you can’t recall or explain.
👉 In Snitchnotes:
Use the built-in quiz or write your own “blind recall” section:
“Without looking, what are the 3 key mechanisms behind X?”
This triggers retrieval practice, one of the most powerful memory effects.
Weakness isn’t failure — it’s feedback.
Short quizzes beat long reviews.
Every test attempt strengthens memory more than rereading ever could.
Think of it as working out your brain — small reps, frequent gains.
👉 In Snitchnotes:
Try mini-quizzes after each topic. Even 3–5 questions reinforce recall far better than an hour of reading.
Rosenshine called this checking for understanding — an essential loop between input and output.
Testing isn’t assessment — it’s construction
Patterns = mastery.
Your brain learns by linking, not stacking.
When you connect new ideas to what you already know, memory pathways multiply.
👉 How to do it in Snitchnotes:
Use backlinks or tags to link topics together:
“Photosynthesis → respiration → energy transfer.”
This mirrors “transfer of learning” principle — students who link ideas understand faster and retain longer.
Ask: “Where does this fit in what I already know?”
Consistency beats intensity.
Small, daily study bursts rewire your brain faster than cramming marathons.
This is backed by spaced repetition and deliberate practice.
👉 In Snitchnotes:
Create a micro-habit: one 15-minute note review per day.
Stack it onto something you already do — after coffee, before bed, while commuting.
Every streak is a rewiring session for your long-term memory.
🪶 Try the SNITCH Method™ in Snitchnotes Turn studying into something your brain actually loves — and remembers.
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