 Here are the three steps that you need to study it like a pro. Step number one is to know how to gather your information from lectures and your review material that you can then take home and predictably review. This is the most common place where most students fail because they'll have a no-folkful of information but then no good way of essentially going through it. Most students tend to just rewrite what this professor has said, they don't really know how to review it. A top student, on the other hand, is going to take their notes where they can essentially say, let me write questions in my notes so that I can essentially test myself on the information that I've written. If I can answer that question, I don't have to read the detail if I can't, then I need to look through it. Step number two is once you have a note-taking strategy and a note-gathering strategy that works for you, is to come to it both systematically and predictably. This is not useful if I come back to it a month later before my exam. It is useful if I review for it systematically where I know pass number one is going to be today, pass number two maybe next week. And then finally, step number three, despite going through a predictable review, a top student knows that there's going to be topics they're great at and some topics that they're not so hot on. And those students have a strategy where on a weekly basis they're going to be able to go to a whiteboard to practice questions on those topics, particularly to make those weaknesses into strikes.