Study Hints for Students
ISU Physics Teacher Education Program
Carl J. Wenning, Instructor
MANAGING YOUR TIME:
- Prepare a semester schedule with all tests and due dates.
- Prepare a weekly calendar with specific times for study.
- Include in the above time for study between classes.
- Avoid scheduling study/work when you will not do it.
- Follow the schedule; resist the urge to skip.
- Do the most difficult activities when you are most alert.
- Schedule short (15 minute) study breaks.
- Alternate types of work: reading, problems, review, etc.
- Spread out study; think of work as a series of small tasks.
- Perform weekly review of all materials.
- Avoid the fear-procrastination-guilt-more fear cycle. Take
on a "do it now" attitude; fear vanishes; work gets
done.
- Seek help as you need it; such help can save valuable time
and help you avoid damaging, negative attitudes.
- Get plenty of sleep; be alert in class; sit near front.
TAKING LECTURE NOTES:
Before:
- Check syllabus for topic and/or chapter in text.
- Read and outline the chapter before going to class.
- Review previous text and lecture notes.
During:
- Copy what is on the board.
- Be alert for clues to important-items (i.e. repeats).
- Avoid being late or packing up early; the lecturer may give
an important introduction or summary.
- Keep legible notes and use an outline form.
- Be brief. Don't copy lecturer's words verbatim.
After:
- Check lecture notes against text. If material wasn't covered
in the lecture, find out why.
- Review notes as soon as possible. Do they make sense?
- Ask questions if you don't understand or notes vague.
- Clarify notes by writing summaries.
MANAGING TEXTUAL MATERIALS -- THE SQ3R METHOD:
- Survey current chapter for organization and topics.
- Question what you are about to read; develop a clear focus.
- Read the text to answer your questions.
- Recite what you've just read. Do it paragraph by paragraph.
- Review the text on a timely basis -- at least once a week.
STUDYING COURSE CONTENT -- THE MURDER METHOD:
- set Mood for studying
- read for Understanding
- Digest readings thoroughly
- Recall what has been learned and correcting that recall
- Expand knowledge through self questioning
- Review performance on tests to learn from mistakes
PREPARING FOR, TAKING, AND FOLLOWING UP ON TESTS:
- Prepare early and avoid "cramming." Review all
homework.
- Study for at least one hour daily in a quiet setting.
- Work with a serious study group; quiz each other regularly.
- Organize all notes into topic or concept; compare with your
text. Determine what instructor considers important.
- Review entire text and all notes. Strive to achieve a good
understanding; avoid memorization for its own sake.
- Place more emphasis on class notes than text. The text is
the background; the lecture is the focus.
- When taking multiple-choice tests consider the following:
- a) Budget your time
- b) leave the most difficult questions for last
- c) predict answer before looking at responses
- d) cross out all clearly wrong answers
- e) if two or more responses are similar, see what makes them
different; and
- f) answer all questions even if you must guess.
- Check your test responses against answer key and appeal questions
if you think you have a case .
Work in a course can be likened to the flight of an airplane.
If you cruise at altitude (study regularly), the amount of work
required is reasonable; if you are constantly landing and taking
off (periodically cramming), it requires more fuel and the odds
of a crash (failure) increase.
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