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Study Techniques, Memory Techniques, College Study
... - Study Tips
– This web site contains college study tips and tricks to help you
manage your ... STUDY TIPS - STUDY TECHNIQUES ... EXAM STUDY TIPS
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Tips for Effective Study
The most common barrier to success encountered by college
students is a lack of effective techniques for study and exam
preparation. If you are one of the vast majority of students
whose answer to the question, "How do you study for your tests?"
is, "I go over my notes," then you need to take a serious look
at your study skills. Here are some suggestions to increase your
effectiveness as a student.
I.
Day to Day
A.
Take good notes. Very few students leave high school with this
skill. College of DuPage's Learning Lab can help you here. Some
suggestions and observations.
1.
Always take the notes for a particular class in the same
notebook. Spiral bound notebooks were invented because they
solved the problem of keeping related information consolidated
in one place. Take advantage of this.
2.
Date each entry into your notebook.
3.
It is usually best to keep the notes for different classes
separate from each other. Spiral notebooks with built in
dividers are excellent for this purpose.
4.
Your notes should contain as complete a record of what the
instructor said as possible. Of course, you should not try to
write every word spoken, but don't leave out ideas. When you
study, your notes should call back to your mind the entire
sequence of ideas presented. Take care to spell all new words
carefully. It you don't know how to spell a word, ask your
instructor to write it on the board. Most will automatically do
so for new or difficult terms.
5.
Anything the instructor writes on the board should appear in
your notes. If the instructor took the time to write it out, he
or she considers it important. You should do the same.
6.
If possible, try to take your notes in some kind of outline
form. The organization of ideas is as important as the content
of those ideas, especially when it comes to learning the
material for an exam.
7.
You might find it useful to have a second color of pen or pencil
available for highlighting important ideas or indicating
vocabulary.
B.
Be involved in your classes. Don't simply pretend you are a
sponge, ready to soak up whatever the instructor says. You are
there to learn, not to be taught.
1.
If the instructor is moving too rapidly for you, or if you don't
understand what is being said, say something!
2.
Ask questions if you are confused. Confusion is definitely your
worst enemy.
3.
If your class includes group activities, participate as fully as
you can. Such exercises are done for your benefit, not to
provide a break for the instructor.
C.
Review your notes every day. This suggestion is one which we
have all heard a thousand times. Unfortunately, most of us never
really believe it until we actually try it. Spend 30 minutes or
so each evening going over the notes from each class. There are
at least two tremendous benefits to be gained from this
discipline.
1.
Research has shown that reviewing new material within 24 hours
of hearing it increases your retention of that material by about
60%. This means that you will be 60% ahead of the game the next
time you walk into class. If you want to significantly reduce
the time necessary to prepare for exams, this is the way to do
it.
2.
Reviewing material before the next class period enables you to
identify points of confusion or omission in your notes, which
prepares you to ask the questions you need to ask before the
next lecture. Again, confusion is your worst enemy.
D.
It is excellent policy to give high priority to new vocabulary.
Language is the most fundamental tool of any subject, and it can
seriously handicap you to fall behind in this.
E.
Keep up on your reading. Unlike most high school teachers, many
college instructors don't give specific reading assignments. You
are expected to go to your text for the reading related to the
materials covered in class. Be independent enough to do this
without being told.
II.
Using Your Textbook
A.
Don't expect your instructor to give you detailed, page by page
textbook assignments. While some may do so, many do not. College
teachers are much more likely to expect you to use your own
initiative in making use of the text.
B.
In most cases, it will be most useful for you to at least skim
the relevant chapters before each lecture. You should receive a
course outline/syllabus at the beginning of the quarter, which
will tell you the subject for each day. You may receive chapter
references (or even page references), or you instructor may
expect you to be perceptive enough to refer to the Table of
Contents.
1.
When you first approach a chapter, page through it fairly
quickly, noting boldface headings and subheadings, examining
figures, illustrations, charts, etc., and thinking about any
highlighted vocabulary terms and concepts. Also take note of the
pedagogical aids at the end of the chapter--study questions,
summary, etc.
2.
When you have finished surveying the chapter, return to the
beginning and read in more detail. Remember to concentrate upon
understanding. Don't simply read through the words. Any words
which you don't understand you should look up. If you own the
book and intend to keep it, you may want to write definitions of
such words in the margins. You may also find it helpful to make
observations and other useful notes in the margins. If you don't
intend to keep the book yourself, you should carry out similar
activities on a page in your class notebook.
3.
On this first trip through the chapter, you should concentrate
upon catching the major subjects and points of the material.
Also take note of those things which you don't understand. If
the lecture on the material doesn't clarify those points, you
should ask your instructor to explain.
C.
Following coverage of the chapter's material in class, you
should go back to the book and read it again. It will probably
be helpful to skim through it first, as you did when you first
looked at it. The tables and figures should be more readily read
in detail. If you are a truly conscientious student, you will
outline the chapter and prepare a vocabulary list of the terms
which are pertinent.
D.
At this time you should think seriously about the review and
study questions at the end of the chapter. Do your best to
answer all fo them as if they were a take-home exam.
E.
You may also want to develop a system of cross referencing
symbols to use when comparing your class notes to your notes
from the text.
F.
Remember that your instructor will probably not use the same
words which you find in the text book. nothing is more
frustrating than to discover that what you hear in class is no
more than a rehash of what you read in the book. However, if
your instructor knows his/her subject, and the author of your
text knows his/her subject, the meat of what they say should be
the same. NOTE: Nobody is infallible. Your instructor may make
mistakes. Don't expect him or her to be more than human.
III.
Preparing Assignments
A.
Here's another thing we have all been told thousands of times:
Don't leave assignments until the day before they are due! If
you have a paper to write or a lab report to prepare, begin it
as soon as possible. In most cases, instructors will be
delighted to receive work early. Remember that many papers or
projects require quite a bit of research before you can even
begin writing. In most cases, it is impossible to accomplish the
necessary preparation in one day or even one week. In some
cases, instructors won't accept late work at all. They are
perfectly justified.
B.
Another sore point: Be aware of the appearance of the work you
submit. You should want to be proud of every assignment you
submit, and that includes being proud of its appearance. If
possible, assignments should always be typed. Never turn in an
assignment written in pencil. Pages torn out of notebooks are
sloppy and unsightly. Think about this point every time you hand
an instructor an assignment. That paper represents the quality
of your work, and your instructor is perfectly justified in
taking its appearance into consideration when assigning a grade.
C.
An increasing number of instructors are requiring that all
outside work be typed. If you don't type, you should consider
learning how. If you don't want to do this, you should begin
investigating ways and means of getting someone else to type
your papers. This will often mean paying a professional typist.
Costs vary, but be prepared to pay a considerable amount. A
really good typist may be able to turn out 6-10 pages an hour.
Think about what you consider an appropriate hourly wage when
you consider how much you should expect to pay a typist. Another
point you must consider is that it will add to the time
necessary to prepare a paper it you have to go to someone else
to type it. In planning the time necessary for typing, consider
the following points:
1.
Your typist may have other customers who are just as anxious as
you are.
2.
A paper takes time to type.
3.
Even the best typist makes mistakes. your paper must be
carefully proofread by you.
4.
After proofreading, the typist must have time to make the
necessary corrections.
IV.
Preparing for Exams
A.
Keep in mind that you want to be an active learner, not a
passive one. The more you use and manipulate the information,
the better you will understand it. Using and manipulating
information in as many ways as possible also maximizes your
ability to access your memory.
B.
Do not wait until the night before an exam to study! Of course,
you should be regularly reviewing your notes, but the
preparation still takes time.
C.
If your instructor hasn't explained to you how he or she designs
exams, ask. this is a perfectly legitimate concern. However,
keep in mind that an instructor has the right to design exams in
whatever fashion he or she sees fit, and in most cases you have
no business asking for changes in that design. You need to learn
to handle all testing styles--including the dreaded essay exam!
D.
A good first step in preparation is to read through your notes a
couple of times. While you are doing this, you might also
1.
Highlight major topics and subtopics, with the goal of
generating an outline of your notes. Even if you take your notes
in outline form, this is a good practice. Major topics often
extend through more than one day's lecture, and it is easy to
lose track of the overall picture from day to day.
2.
With a second color, highlight all vocabulary terms.
E.
Outline the entire set of notes. When you study a large body of
information, you should study from concept to detail, not the
other way around. It will, in fact, be much easier to learn the
details if you take the time to learn the concept and theory
first. The least efficient approach to studying is to attempt to
memorize your notes from beginning to end. It's not the words
which are important--it's the ideas.
F.
Consider ways of dealing with the information other than those
used in class. the more ways you can manipulate and experience
the material you are trying to learn, the more secure your
understanding and memory will be. Some suggestions:
1.
Make charts, diagrams and graphs.
2.
Make lists.
3.
If the subject matter includes structures, practice drawing
those structures. Remember that a drawing is useless unless the
important structures are labeled.
G.
There are almost always types of information which you will have
to memorize (eg. vocabulary). No one has ever invented a better
device for memorizing than flash cards.
H.
One of the most universally effective ways to polish off your
study activities is to prepare a self test.
1.
Challenge yourself as severely as you can.
2.
As you are studying, keep a running collection of "exam
questions." If you seriously attempt to write difficult and
meaningful questions, by the time you finish you will have
created a formidable exam. When you begin to feel you're ready
for your instructor's exam, take out your questions and see if
you can answer them. If you can't, you may need to go back and
reinforce some of the things your are trying to learn.
I.
Never, ever pull an "All-Nighter" on the night before an exam.
This is a "freshman trick," meaning that good students learn
very quickly that it is futile. What you may gain from extra
study time won't compensate for the loss of alertness and
ability to concentrate due to lack of sleep.
J.
On exam day:
1.
Try not to "cram" during every spare moment before an exam. this
only increases the feeling of desperation which leads to panic,
and then to test anxiety. You may find it useful, on the night
before an exam, to jot down a few ideas or facts which you wish
to have fresh in your mind when you begin the exam. Read through
your list a couple of times when you get up in the morning
and/or just before you take the exam, then put it away. This
kind of memory reinforcement not only improves your performance
on the test, it also improves your long-term memory of the
material.
2.
Be physically prepared.
a.
Get a good night's sleep.
b.
Bring necessary writing materials to the test--at least 2
writing tools, erasers, blue books if necessary, calculators if
appropriate and allowed. Be aware of what the instructor has
specified as permitted for use. Some instructors object to exams
written pencil; some prohibit use of tools like calculators. It
is your responsibility to know these requirements; you should be
prepared to take the consequences if you don't.
c.
This may seem silly, but go to the bathroom just before the
exam. Don't expect your teacher to let you leave to do this
during the test! The tension which generally goes along with
taking an exam may increase the need to perform this physical
activity, so you may need to go, even though you don't
particularly feel like it.
V.
Some Final Suggestions
A.
You should receive a syllabus for each class. This is the Rule
Book for that class (in my classes, we call it the Survival
Manual). Know everything on that syllabus! Your teacher has the
right to expect you to know and abide by any rules and
stipulations on that document, and it is perfectly within
his/her rights to penalize you for failing to do so. Respect
dates and deadlines, and expect to lose points if you turn
things in late.
B.
Never miss an exam if you can help it. You will rarely be more
ready for the exam in two or three days than you are on the
scheduled date, and the annoyance the teacher will feel about
having to arrange a special exam time for you can actually hurt
your grade in the end. Miss exams only if you absolutely have
to.
C.
Save everything. Never throw away a handout or a returned
assignment or exam. With this in mind, equip yourself with a
pouched folder for each class.
D.
Develop systematic behavior patterns associated with your
schoolwork.
1.
Keep your class materials together and neat.
2.
Never allow yourself to be caught at school without the
necessary notebooks and materials. If you develop systematic
habits with respect to attending classes, etc., this will be no
problem.
E.
It is excellent practice to set aside a study area at home, and
to designate a particular span of time each day as study time.
However, don't fall into the trap of feeling that study should
never exceed the preordained time limits. You put in as much
study time as is necessary to master the material for your
classes.
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