Illusion of Knowing - Deepstash
Illusion of Knowing

Illusion of Knowing

Fluency illusions trick us into believing we've mastered material when we've merely become familiar with it. This happens because:

  • Rereading creates recognition that feels like recall ability
  • Highlighting produces familiarity without improving retrieval
  • Massed practice (cramming) inflates confidence without building lasting knowledge
  • Fluent processing is mistaken for understanding
  • Self-assessment is notoriously unreliable

The feeling of knowing is a poor indicator of actual learning. Material that comes to mind easily due to repeated exposure creates the illusion of mastery, when in fact it merely indicates short-term familiarity that quickly fades without retrieval practice.

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Forget cramming, re-reading, and highlighting—these popular study methods don't work. This game-changing book reveals scientifically-proven learning techniques that feel harder but create lasting knowledge. Backed by cognitive psychology, these evidence-based strategies explain why struggle, mistakes, and even forgetting are actually crucial parts of effective learning. Whether you're a student, teacher, professional, or lifelong learner, these practical techniques will transform how you approach learning anything new and ensure that knowledge actually sticks.

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