Saturday, February 23, 2013

What Successful Students Do And How You Can Easily Do It Too

By Lachlan Haynes


Power Studying

Let's face it, no-one really loves studying (unless you enjoy school and good on you if you do!) We just want to get the work done pronto right? That's where this article can help you. Studying + Power = Power Studying = Less time studying = Good times for all.

Well we want to get you excited about studying. We want you to look forward to studying. We want you to maximize every minute spent studying and as a result maximize every minute you don't have to study! That's right; we actually want you to study less. What the? Study less? We want you to study less by learning how to power study - to study with maximum efficiency and effectiveness thereby drastically cutting the amount of time spent studying. You have to study anyway, so why not learn how to learn more in less time with twice the results? Sound like a plan Jan? You bet it does!

So what are we waiting for? Let's get cracking on the new habits you are going to introduce and start putting into practise from today. Here they come - are you ready for them?

Successful students do the following:

Never Over-Study

Ever think you're studying but you're just sitting there re-reading the same sentence about 1000 times? What did I just read? What did I just read? You're kind of 'studying', but you're not getting anywhere with your work. Instead of this, take regular 15 minute breaks for every 30 minutes of work you do. So, for every hour you spend studying you get 30 minutes off! Why do this you may ask? Well, taking breaks will restore your energy and refresh your mind - plus it will give your mind some time to take in what you have been doing. So have a break and maybe have a kit kat (or do whatever kids do these days). Bonus tip: never study for more than 45 minutes at a time because your brain tends to turn to mush and switch off at around about the 45 minute point.

Plan Their Study

Top students don't just randomly sit down and complete work. They actually plan what they are going to do. They literally plan the time they will study and they set goals for what will be achieved. For example, your new habit could be saying 'I will study from 6 pm to 7.15 pm with a 15 minute break at 6.30 pm. At the completion of this time I will have done all my fractions worksheets and my sociology homework. I will then go online and throw sheep at people'. Think we're kidding? We're not. If you want to be successful, do as successful people do. Set a plan and set a goal and stick to it. If you don't achieve the goal, set a new one. By having set times for doing work each day it will create a routine and a routine is the first step towards developing a habit. We love affirmative habits, affirmative habits are good. When you know that you have committed to work at a specific time each day you will be mentally prepared for it. You will know 6 pm is 'go time on study'. You will know it's coming and be ready for it. Just like you know 7 pm is dinner time. What's for dinner mother dearest? The goal setting part of planning is also very important. If you sit down with little idea about what you're trying to complete you will just aimlessly go along not knowing if you've 'done enough work or not'. Set a target and direct your energy towards it. Accomplish what you set out to accomplish. Build the confidence. Don't just let the carrot dangle in front of you, bite the freaking thing (a carrot represents your ambitions and dreams in case you weren't aware and thought we actually wanted you to eat a carrot. You didn't think that did you?)

Front Up To The Toughest Work First

Let's face it, when completing tasks we all love to do the easy things first. Why? Because it build our confidence. We get excited when we're ticking items off our to-do list. BANG! 1st item ticked off. BANG! Double tick that item now I'm rolling. The only problem with the tick-off easy items first approach is that you use up your best energy at the start of any study session and so if you are tackling the easy parts with your best energy your energy reserves will be low when it comes time to tackle the hard part of what you need to get done. So what happens then? Bet you can't guess! You can guess? That's right - you get tired, you get grumpy, you get frustrated and then just give up and go play Xbox. We all do it. We really shouldn't though. So get in the habit of dedicating your best energy to the difficult tasks first and completing the easy 'I can do it with my eyes closed' stuff last.

Get Off Social Networking Sites, Your Phone, The Latest Game You Like and Turn Off Your TV

We live in a mobile device online world. But, hey, just turn them off for an hour or so and we promise the world will still be there when you log back in to Facebook! Don't text your friends, don't 'like' stuff, don't make phone calls, don't send texts, just focus on what you're doing! Even if you focus on work for 15 minutes followed by 5 mins of power texting to make up for the 15 minutes of texting you lost, it's better than 30 minutes of work whilst also texting at the same time. It's a good idea to reward yourself for any study completed, but you really should do some work to earn that reward. You agree right?

P.S. Music can be great as a nice soothing background noise when studying - ah so relaxing - and even helpful for study in some instances, but Death Metal cranking so loud your house explodes isn't the best option. There is simply no way you can focus when you do that.

Actually Ask For Help

If you don't know what the heck you're doing just ask someone - a teacher, parent, friend, sibling, cat that always hangs around even though it's not your cat, a clown, a bus driver. Seriously, just ask for help. Don't feel embarrassed or stupid - the most important thing is getting the task completed isn't it? What difference does it make if you have to ask for help? Wouldn't you rather do a good job? If you don't ask, you won't know. Frustration can be easily avoided, but sometimes we have to suck up the ego and ask for help.

Clean Up Their Act

Seriously, do your work in a neat and tidy place. Don't study in a cesspool of your own rubbish. Work on a table or a desk - not on that pile of clothes in the corner that smells better than the other piles in your room. Organize all your books and materials. It's not cool to not be able to see your bed because there are mountains of junk all over your room (although it is fun to wonder 'where will I sleep tonight - can't find my bed again!') A clean environment makes a happy little bee out of you and me. Sorry that's lame I apologize. Good luck!




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