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Importance: Sleep is not a passive period of biologic shutdown. It is a highly organized physiologic state that supports cellular restoration, metabolic regulation, emotional processing, and brain plasticity. In educational and clinical settings, the relationship between sleep and learning is often discussed as if sleep merely protects against fatigue. The evidence suggests something stronger: good-quality sleep is an active ingredient of effective learning, shaping the capacity to encode new information, consolidate memory traces, regulate attention, and sustain academic performance.1,6-10 Observations: Good-quality sleep is multidimensional. It includes sufficient duration, continuity, regularity, alignment with circadian timing, preserved sleep architecture, and the absence of clinically significant sleep disorders.2-5 Across experimental, observational, and meta-analytic work, insufficient or poor-quality sleep is associated with reduced hippocampal-dependent memory formation, impaired attention and executive function, less efficient memory consolidation, and worse educational outcomes in children, adolescents, university students, and medical trainees.6-10,12-21,24-31 Mechanistically, slow-wave sleep, sleep spindles, and rapid eye movement sleep appear to participate in complementary aspects of systems consolidation and cognitive-emotional integration.7-11,15-17 Conclusions and relevance: Effective learning depends not only on time spent studying, but also on the biologic conditions that allow the brain to encode, stabilize, and retrieve knowledge. Clinicians, educators, students, and institutions should treat sleep as a core component of learning strategy and preventive health. Sleep hygiene alone is sometimes insufficient; screening for insomnia, circadian misalignment, and sleep-disordered breathing is medically important when daytime impairment or persistent sleep disruption is present.