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The Feynman Technique: How to Study Less and Understand More

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6

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You're staring at the textbook with hundreds of words and can't process a single one. You've studied for hours. But when the test comes, all you can recall is some random meme you saw online and maybe 1 or 2 key terms. People tell you to just study harder , but harder doesn't seem to do much except make you more frustrated.

What if the problem isn't how much you study, but how you study? There's a technique that isn't complicated or hard to implement, and it's used by one of the most decorated minds in scientific history: the Feynman Technique.

Who Was Richard Feynman?

Richard Feynman wasn't just an above-average smart person. He worked on the Manhattan Project, won a Nobel Prize for his research on quantum electrodynamics, and helped uncover the cause of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. He became known as 'The Great Explainer' because he believed that if you couldn't explain something to someone with no background in it , in relatively simple terms , you didn't truly understand it yourself. From that belief, he developed a four,step learning method.

The Feynman Technique isn't a highstress memorization drill or a brain dump exercise. It's a method for revealing exactly what you understand , and what you don't.

The Four Steps

Step 1: Teach It Like You'd Teach It to a Kid

Take out a blank sheet of paper and write the topic you're studying at the top. Now write down everything you know about it , in essay or mind map form , as if you were explaining it to someone with zero background on the subject. Avoid technical terms completely.

Step 2: Close the Gaps

As you write your simple explanation, you'll hit gaps , places where the logic breaks down or something doesn't quite connect. Those gaps are not failures; they're breakthroughs. That confusion is where your understanding stops. Go back to your notes and fill in what's missing.

Step 3: Simplify Again

Take out a second sheet of paper and redo the entire explanation , but this time, simplify it even further. Use analogies. Bridge the gaps you found. Build it almost like a story.

Step 4: Say It Out Loud

Read your explanation aloud , to yourself, a sibling, a friend, or even a pet. If it makes sense when spoken and the other person can follow the general idea, you've genuinely understood the material.

What This Looks Like in Practice

For photosynthesis, this might go: instead of writing 'chloroplasts facilitate photolysis to generate ATP,' you write 'plants use sunlight to cook their own food, like a tiny kitchen inside their leaves.' Then someone asks, 'What's special about sunlight specifically , why not any light source?' That's a gap. You revisit your notes. Then you rewrite: 'The sun's visible light rays primarily fuel the kitchen inside the leaf.' Then you explain it to your dog.

Why This Works Better Than Normal Studying

In school, we're graded on our ability to memorize and repeat information , only to forget it as soon as class ends. Our minds constantly cycle through what's in memory, discarding what doesn't seem connected to anything deeper. The Feynman Technique forces you to build understanding from scratch, which means you're not just memorizing , you're creating a mental model. And mental models stick. Next time you “kinda” understand don't just sit in front of a book, teach it instead.

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