Okay thanks a lot Chatgpt, so i have history(its lenghty and the dates lets just say i suck at memorising them), political science (again dates and so many treaties and names to remember), english (im good at it but im not very good at writing novel typa english ykwim and i absoultly suck at english talking i have no self esteem), Cs (its kinda tricky but with enough practice i can get good scores, tho this is an optional subject for me), psychology( my psy teacher does everything but actually teach, going to her class really feel like a waste of time and i just know i have read none of its chapter deeply so pls just help me), and lastly yoga (its an easy subject but bruh the name of its asanas and other sanskrit names uffff just help meeee!!!)
Thanks for sharing all that—you're really self-aware, which is a huge strength already. Now let’s turn that “uff just help me” into a full-blown strategy to help you excel in all 6 subjects, build memory power, and boost your confidence. Ready? Let’s break this down smartly, subject by subject.
🔁 CORE STRATEGY FOR MEMORY BOOSTING
Use this across all subjects:
✦ Spaced Repetition (Study a little, review often)
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Study → Review 1 day later → again in 3 days → again in 7 days.
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Use free tools like Anki or a simple notebook for flashcards.
✦ Active Recall (Don’t reread—try to remember)
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Close your book → Ask yourself questions → Write/say answers from memory.
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Example: Instead of rereading a date, ask: “When did the Non-Cooperation Movement start?” Try to answer it without looking.
✦ Interleaving (Switch topics to stay fresh)
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Don’t study the same subject for 3 hours. Rotate:
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History (30 mins)
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Psych (20 mins)
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Break (10 mins)
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Political Science (30 mins)
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📚 SUBJECT-BY-SUBJECT PLAN
1. 🏰 History
Problem: Long chapters, lots of dates, and boring memory work
Solution: Turn memory work into meaningful story + flashcard style
✅ Strategy:
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Use storytelling. Treat each chapter like a Netflix plot.
→ "Why did this happen? Who are the main characters? What was the twist?" -
Make a timeline wall or notebook with:
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Year → Event → Why it mattered
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Use mnemonics:
→ E.g., “1947 = India’s Heaven (Independence)”
✅ Tools:
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Timeline visuals
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Date flashcards (handwritten or digital)
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5-question recap after every topic
2. 🏛️ Political Science
Problem: Treaties, ideologies, too many thinkers & terms
Solution: Group similar concepts and use visual charts
✅ Strategy:
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Make a cheat sheet of ideologies: Liberalism, Marxism, etc. (what they believe + one key thinker)
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Use T-charts for differences: e.g., Lok Sabha vs Rajya Sabha
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Voice-record summaries of treaties and replay during breaks
✅ Tips:
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Color-code your notes (green = definitions, blue = examples, red = thinkers/dates)
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Mind maps help big time here!
3. 📖 English
Problem: Writing like a "novel", weak speaking confidence
Solution: Practice expressiveness without overcomplication
✅ Strategy:
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Practice writing like you're explaining to a friend—clear and thoughtful is better than fancy.
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Use past papers: write 1 answer a day, review and improve.
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For speaking: record yourself reading poems/short texts aloud daily. You’ll improve without even realizing it.
✅ Boosting Self-Esteem:
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Fake confidence at first—it grows into real confidence. Record small voice notes saying “This is me improving.”
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Speak to a mirror daily for 3 minutes.
4. 👩💻 Computer Science (Python)
Problem: Can get tricky, but you’re capable with practice
Solution: Practice small code problems, write things down
✅ Strategy:
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Do one coding question daily (use W3Schools, Hackerrank beginner level)
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Maintain a “Python Bible” notebook: All syntax, concepts, logic.
✅ Quick Recall Hack:
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Practice writing code by hand—it builds memory faster than typing only.
5. 🧠 Psychology
Problem: Teacher is unhelpful, feeling lost
Solution: Self-study using visuals, relatable examples
✅ Strategy:
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Use YouTube channels like:
→ CrashCourse Psychology
→ Simplify textbook into 1-pager summaries. -
Make real-life examples for every concept (e.g., classical conditioning = Pavlov’s dog = everyday habit loop).
✅ Tips:
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Make your own mini quiz after every chapter.
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Write terms + definitions on flashcards.
6. 🧘♀️ Yoga
Problem: Asana names in Sanskrit are hard
Solution: Associate visuals + meanings for each name
✅ Strategy:
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Use images of each asana + name + purpose
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E.g., “Bhujangasana” = Cobra Pose 🐍 (Bhujanga = snake)
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Make quiz cards: show image → recall name, and vice versa
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Speak the names aloud daily—builds memory via repetition
✅ Tools:
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Create a small chart: 1 column = Sanskrit name | 2nd = pose description | 3rd = what it helps with (back pain, focus, etc.)
📅 WEEKLY MINI-STUDY PLAN (EXAMPLE)
Day Subjects Focus Time| Mon | History + CS + English | 2–3 hours total |
| Tue | Pol Sci + Psych + Yoga | 2–3 hours |
| Wed | Revise History + CS Quiz | 1.5–2 hrs |
| Thu | Practice Essay + Psych + Yoga revision | 2 hrs |
| Fri | Past paper day (any subject) | 2 hrs |
| Sat | Full Revise + Flashcards | 3 hrs |
| Sun | Rest / catch-up / light review | - |
✨ Final Boosters:
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🔁 Use flashcards for short answers, dates, psychology terms, yoga poses.
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🎙️ Speak out loud (helps with memory + confidence)
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📓 Make a “Quick Recall Book” for each subject.
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🧠 Teach someone else (even imaginary)—that makes you retain more.
Would you like me to help you:
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Make a custom revision timetable?
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Suggest YouTube playlists or notes per subject?
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Build flashcards or a study sheet for one subject?
I’m ready whenever you are 🙌
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