TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Ask HN: How do you remember what you read?

12 pointsby dynamic99over 9 years ago
Although I can generally remember the basic concepts of books that I&#x27;ve read, I have trouble retaining details.<p>What are your methods for retaining read information?

11 comments

CarolineWover 9 years ago
If I&#x27;m reading for pleasure, I don&#x27;t bother. But when I&#x27;m reading for understanding or learning, I take time to take notes. By hand.<p>I&#x27;ve watched people read technical books quickly, reading as if they are novels. The net result is that they haven&#x27;t internalised any of it, just gained an awareness.<p>Sometimes that&#x27;s all you need to do, to become aware of things, but sometimes you need to engage the material in hand-to-hand combat.<p><pre><code> “Tell me and I forget, teach me and I may remember, involve me and I learn.” ― Benjamin Franklin </code></pre> Get involved.
DanBCover 9 years ago
Read a paragraph. Close the book. Write down what you remember. Re-read the paragraph and check.<p>Once you&#x27;ve got the hang of this expand it to pages and then chapters.<p>Get someone else to test you a short time (a few minutes) after you&#x27;ve read the chapter. Get them to test you a couple of hours later. Get them to test you a day later.<p>Teach the concepts to someone else.<p>Implement them - learn by doing.
评论 #10835678 未加载
lordCarbonFiberover 9 years ago
I&#x27;ll take a different stance than a lot of the other commenters here, in today&#x27;s digital age reading for full retention is often over kill. An awareness of the topic, plus a retention of the source allows you to cover information at a much quicker pace and it useful if you don&#x27;t need to apply any specific details in the immediate future. I find having a breadth of information available is much more useful for creatively solving problems and the internet + cloud storage means the full text is never far away if I need to pursue immediate details.
drakonkaover 9 years ago
With nonfiction books details tend to stick better in my mind on their own (and even more so if I take notes, especially notes in a physical notebook with a nice pen - it&#x27;s like my mind is more invested that way).<p>But when it comes to fiction, I can finish a book, wait a week or so, then read it again and only have a rough idea of the general plot in my mind. It&#x27;s like all details are flushed within days. If it happened with nonfiction or other learning I&#x27;d work on strategies to improve this, but as it is I kind of think of it as a benefit! I get to experience my favorite books (and movies) afresh many many times and never get bored.
bluewaterover 9 years ago
I forget who it was specifically but when listening to a podcast recently the guest mentioned a long term habit of writing a book report after finishing up a book! I plan to try something similar in a plain old composition notebook for 2016. I&#x27;m thinking no more than a page of text highlighting some important points, thoughts, etc.
nextweek2over 9 years ago
Take notes.<p>I am always amazed how little people write during lectures, meeting and when reviewing documents.<p>Even easy concepts noted help create a chronological memory jog.
friggover 9 years ago
The second most important thing is taking notes (by hand). The most important thing is applying that knowledge, so doing exercises of various sorts.<p>You say you are having trouble retaining details, how fine grained are we talking about? Because you WILL forget some details, it&#x27;s unavoidable.
6d0debc071over 9 years ago
If it&#x27;s a mass of stats or something like that, I&#x27;ll fire up a flash card program. If it&#x27;s something more abstract, an important concept or the like, then I&#x27;ll try to apply it to something - use it in a program, try to see what it implies in different contexts.
sailover 9 years ago
While reading, I take a photo of a sentence I like. Later, I look at the photo and write down the part I liked: writing seems to ingrain the conclusion in my mind.
iFireover 9 years ago
For web articles, I save the entire webpage as a mhtml document. The format saves the date of the archive and I have the record of the entire article.
Luuucasover 9 years ago
i currently work on www.letsnote.com to tackle exactly that issue, to get notes of what i read.<p>it&#x27;s quite experimental at the moment