this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2025
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That's only true if you don't refer to your notes. Reviewing notes has a much stronger correlation to remembering than how those notes are generated.
I had a math teacher in highschool that allowed us make a "cheat sheet" during tests -- it had to be hand written on an index card. I discovered that if I actually made a "cheat sheet" I rarely needed to look at it. It's the same for hand-written lists when I'm shopping.
For a lot of people there's something about actually writing information down (by hand) the makes it "stick" better in memory.
And there are studies about just that. However, when you review your notes, it matters a lot less what method you used to create the notes.
If you're unlikely to actually study your notes, handwriting is better. If you're likely to study them, use whatever is most convenient for studying.
For rote memorization, sure.
I'm more talking about conceptual things, say, in math. You don't need to memorize it, but you do need to remember how it works. For that, I find the textbook to be the most helpful, and class time is to help understand the textbook. For that type of thing, I don't need to reference my notes in the future, I mostly need to pay attention in class and revisit the material again later to make sure I got it. Handwriting can help with that type of retention.