How to Study Chemistry in 5 Minutes a Day
You sit down to study chemistry. You open the textbook, find the right chapter, and start reading. Forty minutes later you've covered three pages, highlighted half of them, and if someone asked you a question about any of it, you'd freeze. Sound familiar? Here's the thing: it's almost never that you're bad at chemistry. It's that the way most of us are told to study it — read the chapter, reread the notes, hope it sticks — is one of the least effective methods there is. The fix isn't more hours. It's a smaller, sharper unit of studying. We call it the five-minute method, and it's the idea this blog has quietly been built on since 2015. The five-minute method, in one breath One topic. One page. Five minutes. Then you move on. Almost every topic in chemistry — the mole, VSEPR, buffers, SN1 vs SN2 — can be compressed onto a single page and learned in about five minutes, if you do three things in order: Understand it (1 min). One plain-English “big ide...