Wednesday, November 19, 2008

26 Tips to study smart

1. Be good to yourself.

Keep physically fit and rested.

2. Attitude is all-important.

Use positive affirmations: "I can pass American History."

Provide your own psychological edge, be it a positive attitude or a "lucky pen."

3. Be a chronic enthusiast!

4. Used textbooks may provide insights on a course.

5. Sit in the front row;

if you must sit toward the back of the room, lean forward.

Attentiveness and concentration increase markedly.

6. Don't miss the first and last minutes of class.

They are crucial — important announcements, questions on test, etc.

7. Use a variety of study techniques.

a. Tape chapters (find out if your textbook has companion pod cast chapters). Listen on way to school, work.

b. Use index cards for quick review.

Keep them simple. Throw your highlighter away!

Remember: frequent review takes facts from short-term memory to long-term memory — learning as opposed to cramming.

8. Study in short bursts.

(First and last facts are remembered best; therefore, it will accelerate learning.)

9. Review notes immediately after class.

Even for five minutes.

Something magical happens!

10. Review your notes out loud.

Read your chapters out loud.

11. Appearance raises grades.

Neatness counts.

Word processors are a plus.

If a handwritte assignment is acceptable, use erasable pen.

12. Don't waste time rereading.

Rely on "pen in hand" and SQ3R.

13. Test professors before they test you.

Ask questions about what kind of test to expect,

what material will be covered.

14. Become an expert test taker.

15. Go with initial hunches.

16. Stay with initial hunches.

17. Study according to your biological clock.

Are you "normal," a night owl, or an early bird?

18. Eliminate stress in your life.

19. EXERCISE is the best antidote.

20. Make extra credit mandatory.

21. Never miss a class.

This is considered mandatory by "A" students.

22. Be prepared to bail out.

Don't be afraid to drop a course that is not working for you., BUT be aware of all official dates to withdraw and any vital state legislative restrictions ( Texas has a limit on total number of W hours.)

23. Volunteer to edit a friend's paper.

Use it as a learning experience.

24. Study smart—not hard!

25. Time management skills and discipline pay off.

26. Stay mentally, physically and spiritually fit.

Adapted from the video "Where There is a Will, There is an A" by Professor Claude Olney

Monday, November 10, 2008

Just begin my blog

hmm quite difficult and hard to start being a blogger. but im very interested cause im learning something new today. It is hard for me to understand all the button in this blog but still it more easier to create a blog nowadays but dificult in editing it. no wonder so many teenagers are now using blog to express thier thought and share thier life story. Yes! of course we can share our life story in this blog, our joy, sadness and loneliness. It's a new medium for us to express what we can't express in front of people out there. Ok then. I'll write later.