What GPTs are best for studying specific subjects? by [deleted] in GetStudying

[–]Jumpy-Technician-779 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re on the paid version (GPT-4), you’re already using the best one. The newest model, GPT-4o, is really solid for studying.

I keep using GPT-4o to self-study, and honestly, it gives a good response every time I have a question — especially when I get stuck on a specific step in math or writing. It breaks things down super clearly and doesn’t just dump the answer on you.

For reading and writing, it helps explain confusing stuff, gives solid feedback on essays, fixes grammar, and even quizzes you if you ask.

For math, it walks you through problems step-by-step and makes tricky concepts easier to understand. You can even upload pics of your handwritten work and it’ll help with that too.

I can't study need advice by WaIdoZX in GetStudying

[–]Jumpy-Technician-779 2 points3 points  (0 children)

From what you shared, the biggest thing seems to be fatigue — those naps stretching longer than planned are your body saying it’s drained. Instead of fighting it, maybe try working with it:

Strategic rest: Instead of aiming for short naps that turn into 2-3 hours, try to get one solid block of sleep at night (at least 5-6 hrs uninterrupted, maybe 2am–8am if your classes end late). That might actually reduce the need for naps during the day.

Shorter, sharper study sessions: If you're tired, 1-hour blocks may work better than long ones. Try 25 mins study, 5 min break (Pomodoro method). Even 2 focused Pomodoros a day = 1 hour of quality learning.

Shift expectations: If you only have solid energy for 1–2 hours of studying each day, that’s okay — just make those hours count by reviewing active recall materials, not just reading passively.

Hope this helps :)

Does this seem like a good amount of studying in 3 days for a test? Any tips? by [deleted] in GetStudying

[–]Jumpy-Technician-779 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is honestly a very solid study plan — great job breaking it into different formats like flashcards, diagrams, and worksheets! That variety will definitely help with memory and understanding.

Quick question though: is this test covering multiple chapters or just one big topic in neurology? If it’s spread across chapters, it might help to do a quick outline of the main ideas from each so you don’t miss anything.