Atomic Habits & The Memoriser Block — Why Remembering More Won't Raise Your TOEIC Score
Memorizing more words won't raise your TOEIC score. Discover how to conquer the Memoriser Block with "Atomic Habits" by building small, low-effort routines like the "Visual Tag" and "30-Second Treasure Hunt" that make you faster and more automatic.
Many people studying TOEIC think:
“If I just memorise more words, more grammar, more practice questions, my score will go up.”
But that doesn’t always happen.
TOEIC isn’t a test of how much you remember.
It’s a test of how quickly you can use what you know.
If you only memorise, you will get stuck.
That is called the Memoriser Block.
James Clear’s Atomic Habits shows a simple idea:
Build small habits that help you use what you know — without overthinking.
Why Memorising More Can Make You Slower
Have you ever learned a new word, but couldn’t remember it in the test?
This happens because your brain is trying too hard to find the answer.
In the real TOEIC test, you don’t have time to think slowly.
If you only use flashcards and word lists, you are training your brain to study slowly.
You need practice that makes you faster and automatic.
Example 1: The "Visual Tag" Habit — For Faster Vocabulary
Instead of just looking at a word list, build a tiny drawing habit.
When you learn a new vocabulary word (like commute or invoice),
take just 2 seconds to draw a simple, ugly sketch that represents it.
Commute → Stick figure on a train.
Invoice → Dollar sign with an arrow.
You don’t need to be good at drawing.
This small visual "tag" gives your brain a quick, easy hook to remember the word.
It turns boring memorisation into a fun, low-effort habit that sticks.
Example 2: The "30-Second Treasure Hunt" — For Pattern Recognition
Part 5 grammar questions feel stressful because people try to solve them immediately.
Instead, start with a quick treasure hunt.
Open a Part 5 section, and for just 30 seconds,
ignore the answers. Your only goal is to spot patterns.
For example:
"Find every word that ends in -tion."
"Find every sentence with because."
No pressure. No right answer.
You are simply training your brain to notice patterns automatically.
This fun, low-stakes habit helps you build the exact scanning skill needed in the real TOEIC test.
The Point: Small Habits > Big Memorisation
Memorising is important.
But memorisation alone will not help you perform in the TOEIC test.
Atomic Habits shows that small, daily habits — like sketching a quick visual or playing a pattern-finding game — are what make you faster, more accurate, and more confident.
If you’re tired of memorising and still getting stuck,
The problem isn’t your memory.
It’s time to build better habits.