Active Recall — Stop Rereading Your Notes
The single most effective study tip for Infinite Campus students is to stop passively rereading notes. Research from cognitive psychology consistently shows that active recall — forcing your brain to retrieve information from memory — produces dramatically better retention than highlighting or rereading.
?? Why It Works
Every time you successfully recall a fact, the neural pathway strengthens. Rereading feels productive because the material looks familiar, but familiarity ? understanding. Active recall exposes gaps in your knowledge before test day.
How to Practice Active Recall
- • Close your textbook and write everything you remember
- • Use blank-page brain dumps after each study session
- • Create flashcards and test yourself (don't just read them)
- • Teach the concept out loud to an empty room
Further Reading & Tools
Calculate Your Grades: Use our Grade Simulator and GPA Calculator to see where you stand.
Related Guides: Deepen your understanding with the How to Raise Your Grade and Semester Grade Planning.
What Doesn't Work
- • Highlighting or underlining (creates false confidence)
- • Rereading notes passively before a test
- • Copying someone else's study guide without self-testing
- • Watching review videos without pausing to recall
Spaced Repetition — Beat the Forgetting Curve
Your brain forgets most new information within 24–48 hours unless you actively review it. Spaced repetition combats this by scheduling review sessions at increasing intervals — 1 day, 3 days, 7 days, 14 days after first learning the material.
?? Sample Spaced Repetition Schedule
| Session | When | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Learn | Day 0 | 30–45 min | Understand concepts + take notes |
| Review 1 | Day 1 | 15–20 min | Active recall — brain dump |
| Review 2 | Day 3 | 15 min | Flashcards + weak spots |
| Review 3 | Day 7 | 10 min | Self-quiz on all material |
| Review 4 | Day 14 | 10 min | Final reinforcement |
Total study time: ~80 minutes spread over 2 weeks vs. 2+ hours of cramming the night before. Research shows spaced practice improves retention by up to 200%.
Study by Category Weight — The IC Advantage
Here's a study tip unique to Infinite Campus students: your category weights tell you exactly where to spend your study time. If Tests are worth 45% and Homework is worth 10%, you should spend roughly 4× more time preparing for tests than completing homework.
Tests (40–60%)
Spend the majority of your study time here. Use active recall + practice problems. Every percentage point on a test has the biggest impact on your IC grade.
Projects (20–45%)
Start early and follow rubrics carefully. Projects often have specific grading criteria — hitting every rubric item is easier than acing a test.
Homework (0–20%)
Complete it for practice, but don't over-invest study time here. Use homework as a diagnostic tool — if you struggle, study that topic more for the test.
?? Pro Tip: Use Our Calculator to Set Study Targets
Enter your current grades into our Infinite Campus Grade Calculator, then simulate different test scores. Knowing you need a 85% on the next test to reach a B+ gives you a concrete, motivating study goal.
Practice Problems Over Notes
For math, science, and any problem-solving course, doing practice problems is far more effective than reading examples. The goal is to solve problems independently — without peeking at the solution — until you can do them fluently.
?? The 3-Step Problem Practice Method
1. Attempt the problem without notes. 2. Check your work against the solution. 3. If wrong, redo the problem from scratch until you can solve it independently. This builds the same skill the test demands.
?? Interleave Different Problem Types
Don't practice the same type of problem 20 times in a row. Mix different problem types together — this forces your brain to identify which method to use, not just how to use it. Tests rarely group problems by type.
?? Use Teacher-Provided Practice Resources
Many IC teachers post review materials, practice quizzes, or study guides in the portal. These are the closest preview of actual test content. Always complete these before trying outside resources.
Optimize Your Study Environment
Where and how you study matters almost as much as what you study. Research shows that environmental distractions can reduce learning efficiency by up to 50%.
Do This
- • Put your phone in another room (not just face-down)
- • Use the Pomodoro Technique: 25 min focus, 5 min break
- • Study in the same quiet spot each time
- • Use website blockers during study sessions
- • Keep water and snacks nearby to avoid "errand" breaks
Avoid This
- • Studying in bed (your brain associates it with sleep)
- • Leaving social media notifications on
- • "Multitasking" with TV or music with lyrics
- • Marathon 3-hour sessions without breaks
- • Studying right after eating a heavy meal
Time Management for IC Students
Infinite Campus shows you all your upcoming due dates — use this to your advantage. The best students plan their study time around their IC calendar, not the other way around.
?? Weekly Study Planning Template
Sunday evening: Log into Infinite Campus and check all upcoming assignments, tests, and project deadlines for the week
Rank by impact: Identify which assignments are in the highest-weighted categories and allocate study time accordingly
Block study sessions: Schedule specific 25–50 minute blocks for each subject — treat them like appointments
Use the calculator: Simulate needed scores with our grade calculator to set clear study targets for each assessment
Test-Day Preparation
Since tests and exams carry the most weight in most Infinite Campus classes, your test-day routine matters. Here's how to maximize performance when it counts most:
?? The Night Before
Do a final 10-minute review using active recall — no new material. Get 7–9 hours of sleep. Research shows sleep deprivation reduces cognitive performance by 25–50%, which can drop your test score by a full letter grade.
?? Test Morning
Eat a balanced breakfast (protein + complex carbs). Arrive early to settle in. Avoid discussing test content with anxious classmates — it increases stress without improving performance.
?? During the Test
Read all questions first. Answer the easy ones to build confidence and momentum. For difficult questions, skip and return — your subconscious continues working on them. Budget time proportionally to point values.
?? After the Test
When you get the test back in IC, analyze which questions you missed and why. Were they from a specific topic? Did you run out of time? Use this analysis to adjust your study approach for the next test.
"I started checking my IC weights before every test and focusing my study time on the heavy categories. My GPA went from 2.8 to 3.4 in one semester."
— High School Student, Reddit
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best study tips for Infinite Campus students?
Identify your highest-weighted IC categories first, then use active recall and spaced repetition to prepare for assignments in those categories. Use our grade calculator to simulate target scores so you know exactly what to aim for.
How should I prioritize studying based on my Infinite Campus grades?
Check your category weights in the IC portal. If Tests are worth 45% and Homework is 10%, spend the majority of your study time preparing for tests. Within each category, focus on upcoming assignments with the most points possible.
Does cramming work for Infinite Campus tests?
Research consistently shows cramming is one of the least effective methods. Spaced repetition — studying in shorter sessions over multiple days — improves retention by up to 200%. Since IC tests often carry 40–60% of your grade, you want to maximize retention with proven methods.
How many hours should I study per class?
A general guideline is 1–2 hours per class per week for maintaining grades, and 2–3 hours when preparing for major assessments. Quality matters more than quantity — 30 focused minutes of active recall outperforms 2 hours of passive rereading.
How can I use the Infinite Campus Grade Calculator to study smarter?
Enter your current grades and category weights, then add hypothetical scores for upcoming assignments. This shows you exactly what score you need on each test or project — so you can set a concrete study target instead of vaguely "studying more." Try it with our grade calculator.
Related Calculators & Guides
How to Raise Your Grade on Infinite Campus
9 proven strategies to boost your IC grade — target high-weight categories, recover missing assignments, and plan ahead.
How Infinite Campus Calculates Grades
Understand the exact formulas IC uses — weighted categories, total points, and weight redistribution explained.
Infinite Campus GPA Calculator
Convert your IC letter grades to a 4.0 scale GPA and see how grade improvements affect your overall GPA.
How to Check Grades on Infinite Campus
Step-by-step walkthrough of the student portal — find your category weights and missing assignments fast.