Explain, Quiz,
Retrieve, Apply
AI can make you feel smarter very quickly. The question is whether it’s actually making you learn better — or just feel like you are.
Level Up Smarter · 7 min read · AI · Learning Systems · Workflow
AI is not automatically a learning system. It becomes one only when you use it the right way. The best way to study with AI is not to ask it for more answers — it’s to use it to create a loop.
Ask a question and it gives you an answer. Ask for a summary and it compresses a chapter. Ask for examples and it gives you five. That is powerful. But it also creates a new problem: AI can help you consume information faster without helping you learn better.
If AI does all the thinking for you, you may walk away with a clean summary and a weak memory. You may feel productive because you generated notes, flashcards, outlines, and summaries — but nothing has actually changed in your ability to use the material.
That is the trap. AI is not automatically a learning system. It becomes one only when you use it the right way — and the right way is to make the process active, not passive.
Most people use AI the same way they use Google, YouTube, books, or online courses. They search. They skim. They save. They summarize. They move on. This feels like learning because information is moving quickly. But speed is deceptive.
Real learning happens when you can remember the idea without looking, explain it in your own words, use it in a real situation, get feedback, and improve the next attempt. AI can help with all of that — but only if you make the process active.
The first step is to use AI to explain the concept clearly. This is where AI shines. Instead of struggling through one confusing explanation, you can ask AI to explain the same idea multiple ways until it clicks.
But the key is to avoid stopping at the first answer. A good explanation should make the concept simpler, not just shorter.
“Explain this concept like I’m brand new to it.”
“Explain it using a real-world business example.”
“Explain it with an analogy.”
“Explain the most common mistake people make when learning this.”
“Explain it in one paragraph, then in one sentence.”
This helps you see the same idea from different angles. Do not confuse “that makes sense” with “I know this.” That is where most people stop too early.
Once AI explains the concept, ask it to quiz you. This is where learning starts to become active. Instead of asking AI for another summary, ask it to test your understanding.
“Create a 10-question quiz on this topic. Do not show me the answers until I respond. Include short-answer and real-world application questions.”
The science backs this up. Karpicke and Roediger found that repeated retrieval led students to recall about 80% of material one week later, compared with 36–33% in conditions without repeated testing. Recognition feels easy. Retrieval is harder. But retrieval is where memory gets stronger.
The best quiz questions test whether you can use the idea, not just define it.
- דWhat is active recall?”
- ✓“You just finished a chapter and want to remember it next week. What would you do differently from someone who only rereads it?”
Retrieval means pulling the idea from memory without looking at the source. This is the part that feels uncomfortable. That discomfort is the point.
After AI explains something and quizzes you, pause and ask yourself: What do I remember? Can I explain it without notes? Can I give an example? Can I teach it to someone else?
“I’m going to explain this concept in my own words. Tell me what I got right, what I missed, and what I should clarify.”
Do the retrieval first. Do not paste the source material. Do not ask AI to answer for you. Write your explanation, then use AI for feedback. This prevents the illusion of learning.
If you cannot explain it yet, that is not a failure. That is useful feedback. It tells you exactly what to review.
The final step is application. You have not fully learned something until you can use it. Application closes the loop — without it, learning stays theoretical.
- Learning copywriting? Write a headline.
- Learning sales? Improve one outreach message.
- Learning productivity? Change one part of your schedule.
- Learning AI? Build one workflow.
- Learning finance? Review one decision.
- Learning leadership? Use one idea in a conversation.
“Give me one small real-world exercise I can do today to apply this concept.”
“Turn this idea into a 15-minute practice task.”
“Give me three ways to use this in my business this week.”
Explain → Quiz → Retrieve → Apply
Ask AI to explain the concept clearly, simply, and from multiple angles until it clicks.
Ask AI to test you without showing the answers first. Force retrieval, not recognition.
Explain the idea from memory first, then have AI identify gaps and weak spots.
Use the idea in a real task within 24–48 hours. No application = no real learning.
Here is a single prompt you can use to run the entire workflow at once:
“I want to learn [topic]. Use this workflow: first, explain it simply with an example. Second, quiz me with 5 questions but do not show the answers. Third, after I respond, grade my answers and identify my weak spots. Fourth, give me one small real-world action I can take today to apply the concept.”
The wrong way is to outsource the entire thinking process. The better prompts are active ones.
- דSummarize this for me.”
- דWrite my answer.”
- דGive me the key points.”
- דMake it shorter.”
- ✓“Ask me questions.”
- ✓“Test my understanding.”
- ✓“Find my weak spots.”
- ✓“Give me a practice task.”
Passive AI gives you output. Active AI builds your ability. In a world where everyone has access to AI, the edge belongs to the person who uses it to learn better — not just faster.
AI can speed up learning, but speed is not the real goal. The real goal is conversion. Can you convert information into understanding? Understanding into memory? Memory into action? Action into skill?
AI is one of the most powerful learning tools available today — but only if you use it as a training partner, not a shortcut.
Explain. Quiz. Retrieve. Apply. Then repeat.
Stop Consuming.
Start Converting.
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