7 AI Prompts That Help You Learn Anything Twice as Fast
These 7 AI prompts turn Brown’s scientific principles into a practical system to help you master any skill or subject in half the time.
Most people learn by re-reading books and highlighting text. Science shows this is the least effective way to remember anything. It creates an “illusion of mastery” where you feel like you know the material, but you forget it the moment you close the book.
In the book Make It Stick, researchers Brown, Roediger, and McDaniel prove that real learning requires effort. You need to pull information out of your brain, not just push it in. These AI prompts turn those scientific principles into a practical system to help you master any skill or subject in half the time.
1. The Active Recall Architect
This prompt converts any article or text into a self-testing tool to stop passive reading.
I am studying [TOPIC/ARTICLE CONTENT]. Act as a learning coach.
Based on the text provided, generate 5 challenging open-ended
questions that require me to explain the core concepts from memory.
Do not provide the answers yet. After I answer, grade my
responses and explain any gaps in my logic.
2. The Spaced Repetition Strategist
This prompt creates a custom schedule to ensure you don’t forget what you just learned.
I have just learned [SPECIFIC SKILL OR CONCEPT]. I want to
move this into my long-term memory using spaced repetition.
Create a 30-day review schedule for me. Tell me exactly
which days I should review this material and provide a
3-minute "quick-fire" retrieval exercise for each session.
3. The Interleaving Engine
This prompt helps you mix different topics to build better problem-solving skills.
I am currently learning [TOPIC A], [TOPIC B], and [TOPIC C].
Act as an educational designer. Create a practice session
that interleaves these three topics. Give me a series of
problems or scenarios where I have to quickly switch between
applying the principles of each topic. Explain how these
concepts overlap.
4. The Elaboration Specialist
This prompt forces you to connect new information to things you already know.
I am trying to understand [NEW CONCEPT]. To help me
remember it, ask me 3 deep questions that force me to
relate [NEW CONCEPT] to [A TOPIC YOU ALREADY UNDERSTAND WELL].
Guide me through the process of building a mental
bridge between these two ideas using metaphors.
5. The Desirable Difficulty Designer
This prompt makes the material harder to learn so it is harder to forget.
I find [SUBJECT] too easy and I am worried I won't retain it.
Take the following information: [PASTE NOTES].
Rewrite this information by adding "desirable difficulties."
Create puzzles, fill-in-the-blank challenges, or "reverse
engineering" tasks that force me to work harder to
process the information.
6. The Mental Model Refiner
This prompt uses the Feynman Technique to ensure you actually understand the “why” behind the “what.”
Explain [COMPLEX TOPIC] to me as if I am 10 years old.
Once you provide the explanation, ask me to explain
a specific part of it back to you. If my explanation
is too technical or uses jargon, point it out and
ask me to simplify it further until the core idea is
crystal clear.
7. The Meeting-to-Memory Converter
This prompt turns your passive meeting notes into a retrieval practice test.
Here are my notes from [MEETING/LECTURE]: [PASTE NOTES].
Instead of summarizing them, turn these notes into a
"Retrieval Test." Give me 5 "What if?" scenarios based
on these notes that require me to apply the decisions
made in the meeting to a new problem.
MAKE IT STICK CORE PRINCIPLES TO REMEMBER:
- Retrieval is Key: Pulling facts from memory strengthens the brain’s pathways.
- Space It Out: Information is better retained when study sessions are spread apart.
- Interleave Your Study: Mix different subjects to learn how to pick the right tool for the job.
- Embrace the Struggle: When learning feels hard, you are actually learning more.
- Avoid Re-reading: Highlighting and re-reading create a false sense of knowledge.
MINDSET SHIFT
Before every study session, ask:
- “Am I just looking at this information, or could I explain it if the book was closed?”
- “How does this new idea connect to something I already know?”
In Short
Learning is about how much you can retrieve when the pressure is on. By using these prompts, you move away from passive consumption and toward active mastery. Stop trying to memorize and start trying to remember.
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