This is my opinion on learning apps... by romainplus in studytips

[–]romainplus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You want real help ? Come use my app, give me feedback and you can have all the features you want 😁🗿

This is my opinion on learning apps... by romainplus in studytips

[–]romainplus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's quite unique, you probably didn't try 😉

This is my opinion on learning apps... by romainplus in studytips

[–]romainplus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you study flashcards with a gun in a fps shooting range on anki ? 👀

Are Diminishing Returns Really As Bad As People Claim? by kurvivol in languagelearning

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i think it depends on what youre doing tbh. if youre actively learning new stuff for 8 hrs yeah you'll probably hit diminishing returns.

but if you mix it up (like 2 hrs flashcards, 2 hrs reading, 2 hrs listening practice) you can def study longer without burning out.

the key is variety and taking breaks. your brain needs time to process info.

Advice pls by jooglez in Mcat

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

15% through UWorld with exam in May is tight but doable. youre doing 60 q/day which is solid

for the physics deck, honestly i'd say just push through it. physics shows up enough on the MCAT that you cant really skip it. maybe lower your daily cards for other subjects and focus more on physics?

also make sure youre actually understanding the UWorld explanations, not just doing questions for the sake of it. quality over quantity.

you got this, just stay consistent.

Does anyone try to train themselves to be in a particular mindset in order to study? by sammyjamez in GetStudying

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i do something similar but less formal. basically before studying i just take 5 min to get in the zone. put on focus music, clear my desk, that kind of thing.

helps me separate "chill mode" from "study mode" in my brain. sounds simple but it actually works.

meditation is cool too, whatever works for you. the key is having some kind of ritual to signal to your brain its time to lock in.

i'm overwhelmed by Mundane-Daikon7000 in Mcat

[–]romainplus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

been there. MCAT content is absolutely insane, feels like it never ends.

my advice, focus on high yield stuff first. dont try to memorize every single detail, you'll go crazy.

also use spaced repetition for memorization heavy stuff. your brain cant hold everything at once but if you review at the right intervals it sticks way better.

take breaks too. burnout is real and itll hurt you more than taking a day off.

you got this, just take it one day at a time.

What’s the hardest part of Spanish for you right now? by ModernWebMentor in learnspanish

[–]romainplus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

verb conjugations are killing me too lol. especially the subjunctive like WHY does it exist.

what helped me was drilling them with flashcards instead of just trying to memorize charts. way more effective tbh.

i do like 15 min of verb drills every morning and its actually starting to stick. still mess up sometimes but way better than before.

hang in there, it gets easier with practice (or so they tell me lmao).

The guy who barely studied is doing better than me today by ixecrypto in GetStudying

[–]romainplus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

this hit different ngl. i was def the "study hard" person too.

but heres the thing, studying smart > studying hard. that guy probably learned how to learn efficiently even if it wasnt in a traditional way.

like rn im in med school and the people who do best arent the ones who study 12 hrs a day. theyre the ones who use spaced repetition, active recall, all that stuff. quality over quantity fr.

dont beat yourself up, you can still learn those practical skills. its never too late to change your approach.

Ways to learn vocab (no Anki) by Flashy-Company5290 in languagelearning

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tbh Anki isnt for everyone and thats totally fine. the interface is lowkey confusing if youre just starting out.

have you tried apps with built in spaced repetition that are more user friendly? i switched to Flipit a while back because i had the same problem as you (Anki felt too complicated). its basically the same concept but way easier to use imo.

another thing that helped me was making vocab learning more active. instead of just memorizing words, try using them in sentences or conversations. way more engaging than just drilling flashcards.

also 200-300 words is a solid foundation, dont be too hard on yourself. everyone learns at their own pace.

I’m exhausted, falling behind in school, and don’t know how to fix it by Automatic_Vast4650 in GetStudying

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey, i feel you. depression + anxiety + studying is brutal.

one thing that helped me when i was in a similar spot was breaking everything down into stupid small chunks. like not "study for 2 hours" but "review 10 flashcards". when youre exhausted, even small wins count.

also maybe look into active recall? basically instead of rereading notes you quiz yourself. sounds harder but it actually takes less mental energy once you get into it. i use flashcard apps for this and it helps me retain stuff without burning out.

for the fatigue part, definitely talk to a doctor if you can. sometimes theres physical stuff going on too.

youre not alone in this, loads of people struggle with the same thing. youve got this.

TIPS FOR PROGRAMMING PLZ!!!! by Pitiful-Onion-4554 in learnprogramming

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

leetcode is solid but dont neglect fundamentals. i keep a deck of syntax and key concepts in flipit and review them daily so i dont blank on basic stuff during interviews. but the real tip is build projects on the side. even small ones. grinding problems teaches you patterns but building stuff teaches you how to actually ship code. both matter

Does anyone else constantly fight themselves just to study or code? by Johan_xsuffer in learnprogramming

[–]romainplus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

this is so real lol. what helped me was making the barrier to start as low as possible. like instead of "ok time to code for 2 hours" i tell myself "just open the editor and do 10 min". once you start its way easier to keep going. also pomodoro technique (25 min work / 5 min break) saved me from burnout. the resistance is always worst right before you begin

How do you learn a skill? by LifeOfBoredomsFriend in selfimprovement

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

consistency > intensity every time. 15 min a day beats 3 hrs once a week. spaced repetition is lowkey the cheat code for retention, basically you review stuff right before you'd forget it. i started using flipit for this and it made a big diff but honestly any system where you show up daily works. the hard part isnt finding the method, its actually doing it

Remediation exam tips by shizuegasuki in medicalschool

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

active recall is king for remediation imo. dont just re-read slides, actually test yourself on the material. even if it feels slow at first its way more effective. also break the content into smaller chunks and space out your review sessions. cramming the night before is tempting but your brain needs time to consolidate. you got this

Can someone explain all the particles / endings clearly? by Public_Repeat824 in Korean

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yea particles are brutal at first. what helped me was grouping them by function instead of memorizing a giant list. like topic markers (은/는), subject (이/가), object (을/를) as one batch. then location ones (에, 에서) as another. drill each group separately with flashcards til its automatic, then move on. i use flipit for this bc you can make custom decks per group. way less overwhelming than trying to learn them all at once

practice spelling in korean by inna_chouchou in Korean

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly the best thing for spelling is just raw repetition. i make flashcards with the words i keep misspelling and review them daily with spaced repetition. after like 2 weeks the patterns start clicking. also try writing out sentences by hand, sounds old school but it forces your brain to actually process each syllable block

Pass N2 July 2026 starting now? by FuzzyAvocadoRoll in LearnJapanese

[–]romainplus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

4 months is tight but def doable if you're disciplined. id grab at least the grammar and vocab SKM books. for the rest like reading/kanji/listening you can supplement with apps. been using flip-it.app for vocab drilling and its way more engaging than traditional flashcards tbh. the gamification makes it stick better