Can I just take this time to appreciate South Korea rn?
ig: studylustre
Class of 2020 • 한국인 • Skater
I wish I had this when I was learning calligraphy…
Meh
I did it! My first day of productivity, and i got to say, I impressed myself. However, my day didn’t start off how i wanted too. I ended up waking up at 10:00 when i had plans on waking up at 7:30. Kind of a bummer, but what can i say? This girls needs her beauty sleep! At around 10:30 i worked on my SAT prep and prepared for AP clac for my junior year, and i did pretty well! The SAT wan’t that bad, and calculus was a breeze (i was doing limits btw). After that i finished and annotated the first part of “Unbroken”.
I felt pretty accomplished during the first half of my day, until my mom bought fried chicken. I had my diet plan all planned out yesterday, and the fried chicken blew it all up!
although my first DoP wasn’t the best, I’m motivated to get better at these and get through all 100 days! That’s why i believe today was a success!
Now, I haven’t heard of like half of these teas… But I always drink a cup of tea when I’m studying.
Tea has so many benefits to your health and relaxes your nerves as well! Next time you study, treat yourself with a cup of salad water.
I’m currently facing the dilemma of how to take notes from a textbook. It’s hard to know where to begin or what’s the best information I need to really understand the material I’m reading. I have gathered tips and resources to better decide the best method to use the textbook most effectively.
-Preview. Glance over charts or photos used on the pages. Read study questions or summaries that might be given at the end of the chunk of pages. It preps me for the type of reading I will do and to think about the questions as I read.
-Read actively. Don’t take notes or highlight as you read. Read a short section before you stop to take notes and highlight. Your first step after you read the paragraph is to highlight a phrase or two that were the important parts that you’ll need to know for future reference. Also, go to the margins (or your post-its) and start writing a question or two for the paragraph. When you’re done with the entire section, go back and try to answer these questions without looking at the book. If you can answer it, you are doing well on recalling that paragraph. This is also a good time to make some notes for class.
-Review. At the end of the reading, write a summary (in your own words) of what you just read. It helps to understand what you retained from the reading and highlight parts you need to review. I also like to go back and try to answer those questions I made in the margin again. The BEST thing I like to do is to answer the comprehension at the end of the chapter. Each textbook has one. Answer those and, if you’re unsure of the answer, ask them during class!
Other tips:
-Try to keep your notes in your own words.
-If something is not making sense, try reading it out loud. That can often help you process the material in a new way.
-Multiply the number of pages you have to read by 5 minutes. That is the amount of time the average college student needs to spend on their reading assignment.
-Writing in the book itself is highly recommended, but if you have some reason for not doing that, you might also want post-its and use those on each page in place of writing in the book.
Resources:
With the start of 2018 well underway, I wanted to make a masterpost full of links on how to adjust your perspective with studying. Perhaps you want to become a better student overall, improve your focus or get into your dream college, there is always something we want to do better! Hopefully these tips will make 2018 your best academic year yet!
Organisation
Productivity
Motivation
Studying
Self Care
Printables
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