Straight A’s Study Skills

By following these twelve tips, you will stand a better chance of getting straight AAAAA's. Read each tip carefully.

1. Find a quiet area in your house in which you are comfortable and can isolate yourself from . Be sure that this includes a chair, table or desk, and sufficient lighting. Ask others not to disturb you while you are in this special location and turn off all phones, beepers, televisions, videos, , or anything else that your mind will wander to instead of focusing on the schoolwork.

2. Find the best to study. Some students tend to do their best as soon as they get from school while they are still in school mode. Others need a break and don't settle down to study until after , playtime, a nap, dinner, and/or family . Just be sure to allow yourself enough time to get everything done and still get enough each night.

3. Organise your day, week, month, etc. Set aside a specific time each day to do your homework and study. Decide on a reasonable minimum amount of time that you will spend in this quiet place each day. For instance, let's say you decide on 45 minutes as a reasonable amount of time to dedicate to schoolwork each day. This means that even if homework is completed in the first 35 minutes that you will still stay in this area and study or review notes for the next 10 minutes until the 45 is up.

4. Reward yourself for sticking to your schedule and productive. Decide on an to do once your study time is completed. Plan on watching a television show later in the evening. Tell yourself that you will play five minutes of a video game for every fifteen minutes that you study. Create and their rewards before you start studying and hard to reach them each and every day.

5. Variety is important. Vary the topics that you are spending time studying. Get the mandatory homework out of the way first and then go back and spend the additional time reviewing material from different each day. If you spent extra time reviewing history yesterday, spend the additional time on tonight. Some subject areas may require more time than others. You should get a feel for this a month or so into the school year.

6. Study the difficult subjects first and get them out of the way. You will be able to absorb material quicker and make more connections when you are mentally fresh.

7. Take regular study breaks. This can also serve as a mini-reward. For instance, tell yourself that you are going to get a drink or snack or listen to a specific song after you finish re-copying your notes for . Make the breaks short, 3-6 minutes or so, so you won't get side-tracked or lose focus for the day.

8. Don't just re-read notes or the text. Ask questions. Create flash-cards. Redo assignments. Create timelines. Play games. Re-write your notes. Get someone to quiz you. Find websites online that review the same material. Makeup questions that you will be on the test. Create new outlines of the material by some specific topics and filling in the details from . Studying should be an active process, not just time spent re- something.

11. Repetition, repetition, repetition. The material should become second to you by the time test day arrives. If it is not, then you need to devote more time to prepare for the test.

12. Exercise often and before you sit down to study. Research shows that students retain more after physically active. Go to soccer , take a jog, rough-house with your dog, break a sweat first, then settle down and focus on your schoolwork.

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