
Most students study the same way for every test: read the chapter, highlight the notes, and review everything the night before. It feels productive and checks all the boxes. But for high-stakes tests like the SAT and ACT, that approach consistently falls short because familiarity and actual recall are not the same thing. Recognizing material when you see it is completely different from retrieving it quickly under timed pressure.
The students who make the largest improvements on standardized tests tend to study less in one sitting and more consistently over time. This approach is called spaced repetition, and it’s one of the most well-researched study techniques in cognitive science. This guide breaks down exactly how to do it correctly.
In 1885, psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus published the first scientific data on how quickly people forget without review. His findings showed that people lose roughly two-thirds of newly learned material within 24 hours, a result that a 2015 NIH replication study confirmed still holds today.
Spaced repetition is built around that issue. Instead of fighting the forgetting curve by reviewing everything at once, it works by distributing review sessions across time so that each retrieval happens just before the memory fades. That act of pulling information back up before it disappears is what does the work. The brain strengthens its ability to reinstate a memory pattern every time you successfully retrieve it, making it easier to recall under pressure.
Retrieval practice combined with spacing has been shown to reduce forgetting by up to 80% over one week compared to reviewing the same material in a single block. Cramming creates the feeling of learning without lasting retention. The material may be familiar right after you review it, but be forgotten by test day. The SAT and ACT reward fast, accurate retrieval under timed conditions, and that is a skill you can only build over time.
The most research-backed starting point is the 1-3-7-14-30 method. Here’s how it works:
After Day 30 with consistent recall, move the material to a monthly maintenance deck and shift your active sessions to newer content.
The 1-3-7-14-30 method assumes you have time to run the full cycle, which means your start date matters a lot.
The most important rule: consistency matters more than perfect timing. Missing a review session breaks the compounding effect, while a slightly imperfect schedule you actually follow will always outperform a perfect one you abandon after a week.
Whatever tool you choose, the review must be active. Ensure that you are testing yourself rather than simply rereading material.
Most students who try spaced repetition and give up likely make these errors:
Spaced repetition gives you the how to study but knowing what to study requires a deeper understanding of the test itself: which grammar rules appear most on the ACT, which SAT math topics are highest-frequency, and where your specific gaps actually are.
That’s where expert guidance changes everything. Test Prep Score connects students with experienced tutors who know exactly which content to prioritize and how to build a prep plan around their test date. Explore our recommended tutors and start studying smarter today.