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Learning Science: How the Brain Actually Learns — Education · Cognitive Science
Education · Cognitive Science

Learning Science: How the Brain Actually Learns

An evidence-based hub on how brains acquire skill — spacing, retrieval, interleaving, cognitive load, mindset, and the neuroscience behind durable learning.

Key takeaways

  • Spaced retrieval is the single highest-leverage learning technique.
  • Interleaving outperforms blocked practice for long-term transfer.
  • Cognitive load is finite; instruction design must respect working-memory limits.
  • Mindset and metacognition shape what learners actually do with their time.
  • Sleep after learning is part of the technique, not a luxury.

What this hub covers

Most learning advice is folk wisdom. The cognitive-science record is unusually consistent: a small set of techniques produces most of the gains. This hub documents what actually transfers and why — from K-12 to professional skill acquisition.

Long-form articles

Sourced, evidence-based explainers. New entries added regularly.

The Science of Learning: What 100 Years of Research Converged On

Learning · Overview · 9 min

The Science of Learning: What 100 Years of Research Converged On

A small set of evidence-based techniques produces most of the gains in human learning. The rest is folklore.

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Spaced Repetition: The Spacing Effect Explained

Memory · Spacing · 8 min

Spaced Repetition: The Spacing Effect Explained

Spaced retrieval — testing yourself at expanding intervals — is the single most-studied and most-replicated technique in learning science.

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Retrieval Practice: Why Testing Is Studying

Memory · Active Recall · 8 min

Retrieval Practice: Why Testing Is Studying

Active recall outperforms re-reading across virtually every controlled comparison. Testing is not just assessment — it is learning.

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Interleaving and Deliberate Practice

Practice · Transfer · 8 min

Interleaving and Deliberate Practice

Mixing problem types and deliberately working at the edge of competence produces deeper, more transferable skill than blocked drills.

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Cognitive Load Theory: Designing for Working Memory

Instruction · Working Memory · 8 min

Cognitive Load Theory: Designing for Working Memory

Working memory is the bottleneck of learning. Cognitive Load Theory explains how instructional design can respect — or violate — its limits.

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Growth Mindset: The Neuroscience and the Caveats

Mindset · Motivation · 8 min

Growth Mindset: The Neuroscience and the Caveats

Believing intelligence is malleable changes how people respond to setbacks. The effects are real but smaller than early popularization implied.

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Metacognition: Learning How You Learn

Self-Regulation · Strategy · 7 min

Metacognition: Learning How You Learn

Metacognition — thinking about your own thinking — is one of the strongest predictors of academic success. It can be trained.

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How the Brain Reads: From Symbols to Meaning

Reading · Neuroscience · 8 min

How the Brain Reads: From Symbols to Meaning

Reading is a recent cultural invention repurposing visual and language circuits. Its neural pathway is now well mapped — and its failure modes well understood.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the most effective study technique?

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Spaced retrieval — testing yourself at expanding intervals. It outperforms re-reading and highlighting across decades of studies.

Does learning style matter?

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The 'learning styles' hypothesis lacks empirical support. Matching content to format (e.g. diagrams for spatial material) matters more than matching to a learner's preferred style.

How long should study sessions be?

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Shorter, spaced sessions usually beat marathon sessions of equal total duration.

Further reading & sources