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3 questions · Based on this article

Question 1

Why is 're-reading' notes and textbooks considered an ineffective study strategy for medical students?

The article explains that re-reading creates a 'fluency illusion,' where the material feels familiar, but the student has not built the robust recall necessary to apply the information under pressure.

Question 2

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Using quizzes to attempt retrieval before feeling 'ready' leverages the testing effect, which strengthens memory traces and exposes exactly what the student does not yet understand.

Question 3

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The article notes that pre-clinical years involve high-volume memorization (e.g., pharmacology/anatomy), while clinical years require applying that knowledge to case-based reasoning and differential diagnoses.

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