how to create the perfect study routine
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There are some main rules to create a perfect study routine:
- 1) **Schedule short study sessions, every day**.
In most typical college schedules, your classes will probably take a morning or an afternoon, or the equivalent of six to eight hours of classes divided in multiple chunks of time. This means that you should manage the remaining hours of the day to do most of your coursework, as well as taking enough time to take your meals, relaxing and having the appropriate number of hours of sleep.
In doing this, less is better - the best students know how to schedule daily small chunks of deeply focused work, instead of cramming everything once a week or right before the exam. You should forget the typical idea stating that more time studying equals more memorisation or comprehension. In fact, studying for an extended period of time without breaks may actually hurt your ability to learn your material.The goal here, then, is to schedule one to three study sessions per day in your calendar. Usually, each study session (and that means an uninterrupted stretch of time of focused work) should range from 20 minutes to one hour. Whether you study for 20 , forty or sixty minutes depends on a number of variables like your levels of energy, focus, your interest on the learning material and even your comprehension of the subject. Harder topics may require a longer study session, while easier topics may only need a 20 minute revision time. Interesting topics or problem sets can probably be solved faster, since you are more motivated to work through them, then boring exercises. The secret is to understand that each session should range from 20 minutes to 1 hour. After a session is complete you should take a break from 5 to 15 minutes and after the break is over you can proceed to a second study session continuing the same subject or related to other course. Since we are trying to maximize your effort in less time, it's recommended that you do no more than three focused study sessions in a row. Our goal is to create a manageable and short study routine that can be repeated daily and not an overwhelming period of reading and problem solving that only happens once or twice a week.
2) **Schedule a longer buffer session per week.** Although you should focus your efforts on small chunks of deep work during the week, it's a good idea to schedule a couple of hours per week as your buffer. You can use this to either consolidate past materials created during the week or to make up for the time you've lost due to some unforeseen event. An early morning or an evening during the weekend is a great time to place your buffer in your schedule since it's probably a more flexible time for you and since it's also the end of your weekly classes, you can use it for any of your courses. Remember that the goal is to **not use your buffer** but you should schedule it anyway so you know it's there in case something goes wrong during the week. If you've been organized and were able to keep up with your schedule then you've just earned a couple of hours of time for yourself.
3) **Have strict time management habits.** A good study routine can only be created and maintained with strict time management habits. And here I refer to time management as the act of allotting specific study related tasks to specific slots of time or, in this case, your short study sessions. This means that your short study sessions shouldn't comprise of an abstract selection of school work but rather an organized workflow of tasks you need to complete. For instance, if you schedule a study session in your calendar from 2 to 3 pm and just plan to study for your "European Politics" class, that's *bad* time management. When scheduling that event in your calendar, you should already know what specific tasks you should be covering during that hour. For instance, a good example of this would be planning to "read from page 15 to page 30" for European Politics and answer two discussion questions. Another important point for strict time management is that you should consistently go through the list of tasks you have to complete on a certain day or week, evaluate them and move them around if needed. Basically, the first thing you should be worried about is your own perception of the amount of work you have to go through.
► s u b s c r i b e https://goo.gl/5pSFSM
F T C : This video is sponsored by CuriosityStream.
Music by Epidemic Sound: http://epidemicsound.com/creator
#studyroutine
Видео how to create the perfect study routine канала Mariana's Study Corner
There are some main rules to create a perfect study routine:
- 1) **Schedule short study sessions, every day**.
In most typical college schedules, your classes will probably take a morning or an afternoon, or the equivalent of six to eight hours of classes divided in multiple chunks of time. This means that you should manage the remaining hours of the day to do most of your coursework, as well as taking enough time to take your meals, relaxing and having the appropriate number of hours of sleep.
In doing this, less is better - the best students know how to schedule daily small chunks of deeply focused work, instead of cramming everything once a week or right before the exam. You should forget the typical idea stating that more time studying equals more memorisation or comprehension. In fact, studying for an extended period of time without breaks may actually hurt your ability to learn your material.The goal here, then, is to schedule one to three study sessions per day in your calendar. Usually, each study session (and that means an uninterrupted stretch of time of focused work) should range from 20 minutes to one hour. Whether you study for 20 , forty or sixty minutes depends on a number of variables like your levels of energy, focus, your interest on the learning material and even your comprehension of the subject. Harder topics may require a longer study session, while easier topics may only need a 20 minute revision time. Interesting topics or problem sets can probably be solved faster, since you are more motivated to work through them, then boring exercises. The secret is to understand that each session should range from 20 minutes to 1 hour. After a session is complete you should take a break from 5 to 15 minutes and after the break is over you can proceed to a second study session continuing the same subject or related to other course. Since we are trying to maximize your effort in less time, it's recommended that you do no more than three focused study sessions in a row. Our goal is to create a manageable and short study routine that can be repeated daily and not an overwhelming period of reading and problem solving that only happens once or twice a week.
2) **Schedule a longer buffer session per week.** Although you should focus your efforts on small chunks of deep work during the week, it's a good idea to schedule a couple of hours per week as your buffer. You can use this to either consolidate past materials created during the week or to make up for the time you've lost due to some unforeseen event. An early morning or an evening during the weekend is a great time to place your buffer in your schedule since it's probably a more flexible time for you and since it's also the end of your weekly classes, you can use it for any of your courses. Remember that the goal is to **not use your buffer** but you should schedule it anyway so you know it's there in case something goes wrong during the week. If you've been organized and were able to keep up with your schedule then you've just earned a couple of hours of time for yourself.
3) **Have strict time management habits.** A good study routine can only be created and maintained with strict time management habits. And here I refer to time management as the act of allotting specific study related tasks to specific slots of time or, in this case, your short study sessions. This means that your short study sessions shouldn't comprise of an abstract selection of school work but rather an organized workflow of tasks you need to complete. For instance, if you schedule a study session in your calendar from 2 to 3 pm and just plan to study for your "European Politics" class, that's *bad* time management. When scheduling that event in your calendar, you should already know what specific tasks you should be covering during that hour. For instance, a good example of this would be planning to "read from page 15 to page 30" for European Politics and answer two discussion questions. Another important point for strict time management is that you should consistently go through the list of tasks you have to complete on a certain day or week, evaluate them and move them around if needed. Basically, the first thing you should be worried about is your own perception of the amount of work you have to go through.
► s u b s c r i b e https://goo.gl/5pSFSM
F T C : This video is sponsored by CuriosityStream.
Music by Epidemic Sound: http://epidemicsound.com/creator
#studyroutine
Видео how to create the perfect study routine канала Mariana's Study Corner
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10 августа 2019 г. 21:00:04
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