Myth 03 — Underlining Keywords Isn’t Enough

Myth 03 — Underlining Keywords Isn’t Enough

People keep saying “highlight the keywords so the passage sticks.” Reality: underlining often tricks you into feeling done while the main idea still isn’t clear.

Why highlighting is misleading

  • Completion illusion: once the page is striped with ink, your brain celebrates—even if comprehension is shallow.
  • No link to context: marking a word without grasping how it functions in the sentence doesn’t help you reuse it.
  • Zero self-check: few readers stop to ask, “Could I explain this paragraph in my own words?”

What to do instead of only highlighting

  1. Interrogate the question first. Read it twice, then close your eyes and rephrase it out loud.
  2. Predict the information type. Is the answer a number, a person, a location? Knowing the category primes your brain to notice it.
  3. Anchor everything to context. In listening and reading tasks, keywords are usually paraphrased; focus on meaning, not exact wording.
  4. Retell the passage yourself. If you can’t paraphrase it, you haven’t really understood it yet.

When highlighting still helps

Use it intentionally:

  • Flag questions you need to revisit.
  • Jot quick reminders of ideas you’ll reuse in writing or speaking.

Think of highlighting as a supporting step. Real progress comes from understanding, summarising, and anticipating the information you need next.