Study Tips
The purpose of studying is to master course material. Studying should not be something that is done only in preparation for a test. It should be on-going: an almost daily event. Roger Prior
Studying is a set of activities one engages in to become intellectually prepared for subsequent learning or for exam writing. Many subjects and biology is no exception are incremental in nature: the topics, to a certain extent, build on one another. If you get behind, or miss some of the foundation material, then you fall into catch-up mode and will have a more difficult time demonstrating success in the subject.
Studying is not doing homework; it is something you do in addition to homework. Homework is assigned; studying is not. Herein lies the difficulty that many students face. They do their homework diligently. The homework gets handed in, checked, marked, or whatever. All is well. Then the exam is announced. If the students havent studied, then the only knowledge they have of the unit material is little residual tidbits that stuck in their minds for some reason. Faced with an exam, and sometimes with very little knowledge of the material it covers, the students have no choice but to attempt to cram as much knowledge into their brains in as short a time as possible.
If you study properly, you shouldnt have to cram!
Studying properly takes time. Once you understand this and obtain some studying strategies, you will have a whole new perspective on schoolwork and your marks will probably go up!
SEVEN SUGGESTIONS TO MAXIMIZE THE EFFECTIVENESS OF STUDYING
1. PICK YOUR STUDY ENVIRONMENT
Effective studying will require your undivided attention. Select a place that
is free from distractions (no TV, no music, no window to daydream out of, etc.).
Make sure it is somewhere you will be comfortable, as discomfort can become
another distraction.
2. MANAGE YOUR TIME; SCHEDULE YOUR STUDY
TIME
There are only ever 24 hours in a day. Add up the number of hours you spend
in class, traveling, socializing, working, eating, etc. If you plan on spending
30 minutes a day studying each subject, you will have to find it from within
the 24 hours. As a student, you should probably spend as much time on academics
as you do on recreational activities. Pick your study times, but dont
wait until just before you go to bed, because you wont be alert enough.
Save your TV, listening to music, computer games and email for then, because
these activities do not require the same high level of alertness.
3. GET ORGANIZED AND SET YOUR PRIORITIES
Ensure that you have all your homework done. Studying is different. It is reinforcing
knowledge that your teacher will assume you already have. At any given time,
you might have several different topics or subjects you could study. Make a
list of them. Determine which ones are more important and which ones will require
more time. Turn this into a study schedule. Before you set about to study, check
to make sure that you have handy all the materials that you will need. Study,
then update your study schedule.
4. STAY CAUGHT UP
If you fall behind due to absences from class, then you will have a bigger burden.
In addition to doing the required homework assignments, you will have to catch
up. This will take up more time and allow less time for effective studying.
Getting a copy of a friends notes is a valuable first step in getting
caught up. You will have to study those notes and make some sense out of them
before you are really caught up.
5. REVIEW OFTEN
Build your own review notes on a daily or weekly basis. Begin to condense the
volume of material you get in class into succinct summaries. You will need the
volume to get the details; the summaries will give you a better overall picture.
6. READ
This is one of the things the textbook is for. Each topic of study in a course
will have a textbook reference or chapter. Read it! Develop some reading strategies
that will help you understand it. Here are a few suggestions:
A. Pre-read the section. Skim over it to get an idea of what it is all about.
B. Study the headings. They introduce the sections of material. Use each heading
to try to figure out what each section will be about.
C. Increase your active reading. Reading requires more participation than staring
at a page full of words. Ask yourself questions on the material as you go through
it. Find the answers. Engage more than just your eyes.
D. Summarize the sections. After you complete a section that had a heading,
go back to the heading. Check yourself. Do you know what the section was all
about.
E. Make notes on sections after you have read them. Put the notes into your
own words no copying from the book!
7. STAY HEALTHY
To stay healthy, you have to eat properly, get enough sleep, and have some other
interests (sports, work, and/or leisure-time activities). Dont fall into
the trap of spending so much time on other activities that you are robbing yourself
of valuable time for sleep and schoolwork.
So, what is studying? Basically, studying is that set of activities that you
engage yourself in to make sense out of a topic that you are expected to know.
It may mean you are doing any number of the following unassigned activities:
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The purpose of studying is to firmly embed information in your memory so you will have it available, whether for a test or for the next increment of knowledge.