Best Study Tip: Blurting Method
This is not about sharing the tea with your bestie!!
by Scholarly
by Scholarly

You know that time when you were arguing with your partner,
And they suddenly bring up something you said 10 years ago…
And you’re just sitting there wondering;
how do they even remember that??
Well… there’s science to it, and we’re about to get into it.
The blurting method is basically this:
You study something…
then you close your notes and write down everything you remember.
No peeking. No cheating. No “let me just quickly check this one line.”
Just you vs your brain.
Whatever comes out, comes out (pun intended).
That’s blurting.
Most common study flow goes like this:
read
highlight
feel productive
These are common study tips, but they don’t always work.
Because your brain is just recognizing information—not recalling it.
Blurting forces you to:
actively retrieve information
figure out what you actually know
and (more importantly) what you don’t
It’s like exposing your brain’s lies.
Honestly, this is one of the most effective study tips that people don’t use enough.
If i were to teach it to myself again, this is how I would go about it:
Read your notes. Watch the lecture. Understand the topic. Analyze the content
Don’t overdo it, 20–30 minutes is enough.
And I mean everything.
Notes closed. Tabs closed. Phone away.
No emotional support Google.
Now grab a blank page and write:
key concepts
definitions
diagrams
anything you remember
Messy is fine. Wrong is fine.
The goal is not perfection.
The goal is honesty.
Now go back to your notes.
See:
what you got right
what you missed
what you completely forgot existed
These gaps?
That’s exactly what you need to study.
This is where blurting turns into one of the best tips for better studying.
Do another round of blurting.
You’ll notice:
you remember more
you feel faster
things start sticking
That’s progress.
I will be honest, it will feel worse than talking to your crush!
You’ll sit there thinking:
“Wait… I just studied this. Why can’t I remember anything??”
That’s normal.
Because for the first time, you’re not recognizing information…
you’re trying to recall it.
And recall is harder.
But also way more powerful.
If you want even better results, combine blurting with:
spaced repetition → revisit topics over time
Cornell notes → organize what you learn
teaching → explain what you blurted
This is where basic study tips for memorizing turn into an actual system.
Best times:
after finishing a topic
before revision
before exams
Basically anytime you want to answer:
“Do I actually know this?”
This is one of those better studying tips that works at every stage.
Don’t do this:
peek at notes mid-blurt
stop because it feels hard
judge yourself for forgetting
That defeats the whole purpose.
Blurting is supposed to show you your weak spots.
That’s not failure, that’s direction.
Now you know why your partner remembers everything…
They’ve probably just been blurting it out as tea to their friends this whole time.
Scholarly breaks your study goals into bite-sized wins so you actually understand what you learn; not just memorize it!
Free for students. No credit card needed!!!