Dolphin Public School, Muzaffarpur

Understand the Concept Before You Memorise

Most students think they have a memory problem. I used to think the same. I would read answers again and again, underline everything, and still forget during exams. Later, I realised something important: the problem wasn’t memory — it was lack of understanding.

This blog explains why understanding concepts first makes studying easier and how you can actually do it as a school student.


Why Memorising Without Understanding Fails

When you memorise without understanding:

  • Answers feel confusing and heavy
  • You forget easily under exam pressure
  • One small question change can panic you

Your brain treats such information as random data, not meaningful knowledge.

That’s why mugged-up answers disappear so fast.


What Does “Understanding a Concept” Really Mean?

Understanding doesn’t mean knowing every word.

It means:

  • You know why something happens
  • You can explain it in simple language
  • You can give one example on your own

If you can explain a topic to a younger student, you’ve understood it.


How I Understand a Concept Before Memorising

Here’s a simple method I use:

Step 1: First Read = No Pressure
  • Read the topic once
  • Don’t underline or memorise
  • Just try to get the idea

Think of it like watching a movie trailer, not the full movie.


Step 2: Ask Yourself Basic Questions

After reading, ask:

  • What is this topic about?
  • Why is it important?
  • Where is it used?

If you can answer these, you’re already ahead.


Step 3: Explain It in Your Own Words

Close the book and try to:

  • Say the concept out loud
  • Or write it in 3–4 lines

Don’t worry about perfect language. Simple is best.


Example (Simple)

Instead of memorising a definition word-for-word:

Try understanding it like this:

  • What is it?
  • How does it work?
  • What is one real-life example?

Once this is clear, memorising keywords becomes easy.


How Understanding Helps in Exams

When you understand:

  • You can write answers even if you forget exact lines
  • You can handle twisted or application-based questions
  • You feel more confident and less stressed

Exams reward clarity, not perfect memory.


Common Mistakes Students Make

  • Jumping straight to memorising
  • Studying only for marks, not meaning
  • Being afraid of not understanding immediately

Remember: confusion is the first step to clarity.


Final Thoughts

Before trying to memorise anything, pause and ask:

“Do I really understand this?”

Understanding first saves time, reduces stress, and makes learning feel lighter.

Start with one chapter, apply this method, and you’ll feel the difference.

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