Sunday, June 15, 2025

Learn Like Sherlock: Priming Your Brain for Smarter Learning

In the world of detective fiction, Sherlock Holmes never walks into a room aimlessly. He enters with a clear goal, scans for clues, and deduces what matters. In doing so, Holmes is priming the case—just as learners should prime their brains before diving into a complex problem.

Solve the Case: Accounting Problem


Step 1: Prime Your Brain – Set the Case

Before diving into the passage, read the question at the end first.

“Prepare Profit and Loss Appropriation Account and Partners' Capital and Current Accounts.”   

That’s your case summary.

Just like Holmes asking, “What am I solving?”, you are now telling your brain:

➢ Recall the formats.
➢ Focus on data relevant to P&L Appropriation, Capital, and Current Accounts

Your brain is now primed—alert, focused, and ready to pick out what matters.

Step 2: Scan the Clues

Skim the passage like a detective scans a crime scene.
What are your clues?

• Capital & Current Balances
• Salary to Varun: ₹5,000 × 12 = ₹60,000
• Commission to Vivek: ₹30,000
• Interest on Capital @ 8%
• Interest on Drawings @ 6%
• Drawings pattern for each partner
• Net Profit: ₹1,20,000

Your primed brain now starts highlighting , categorizing, and organizing information—automatically.

Step 3: Piece Together the Timeline

• Start with the Profit and Loss Appropriation Account
 - Debit side: Varun’s Salary, Vivek’s Commission, Interest on Capital
 - Credit side: Net Profit
• Use this to calculate their final profit share
• Adjust Current A/cs for all income and drawings
• Update Capital A/cs with opening balances and final figures

Outcome: What Changes?

• Reduced mind-wandering
• Focused search
• Improved attention
• Higher accuracy
• Structured thinking

Sherlock Holmes: “Elementary, my dear Watson — the case is solved!”
“It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data.”

That’s exactly why priming works.

It tells your brain what data matters- before it begins. 

Learning strategy draws inspiration from the book Productive Failure by Manu Kapur.

Gurdeep Kaur
The Teachers Academy Ambassador and a brilliant teacher!

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