this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2024
29 points (91.4% liked)

ADHD

9625 readers
8 users here now

A casual community for people with ADHD

Values:

Acceptance, Openness, Understanding, Equality, Reciprocity.

Rules:

Encouraged:

Relevant Lemmy communities:

Autism

ADHD Memes

Bipolar Disorder

Therapy

Mental Health

Neurodivergent Life Hacks

lemmy.world/c/adhd will happily promote other ND communities as long as said communities demonstrate that they share our values.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I'm studying for a test and the only resources I have are the presentations and somebody's notes in text form. It's a knowledge-retrieval test (no counting/reasoning), and unfortunately I don't know what the questions look like so it seems I really will have to go through everything covered.

Now of course some inanimate notes and a PPT file are the most un-captivating learning format that a person with ADHD could face. One thing I'm good at is going down rabbitholes, so I thought about just googling questions I have about the things written on each page. But the notes go on for 60 pages and it would take a really really long time. I'm lost for ideas. Has anybody found any learning techniques that help when focusing on things as bland as this?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] flicker@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago

Oooh. +1 for repeat as if you're teaching.

I ended up leading study groups because of this!

I'd start the study group knowing absolutely nothing, and end the class with an A+ every single time. Getting into the mindset of "how does (other person) think about this" got me asking questions in class, got me making notes to repackage information for someone else, and always wound up making me learn along the way!