An honest study tip is don't try to romanticize studying. Like, it's good but it works for around a week and then you're back to your lazy couch potato because you can't even sit and study and now you have added extra things that need to be done to actually study. You've added more steps.... Which makes it an even harder task.
Try actually being.... Let's say scared? Recently, I've got this interesting tip, I actually think about the worst possible result I could get and the reactions I'd get and that always gets me going. Because fear is always a better motivator.
I love this look of your blog! <3
Heyy! :D
I'm so glad you liked it! It's Acotar themed and I'm kinda obsessed with Velaris at the moment so it seems fair xD
Anyways, thanks for taking the time and letting me know, i really appreciate it! <3
When you're studying, most of you will probably focus more on the input. You'll take in loads of information. And i mean loads and loads of information. But do you still wonder, why am I not getting the grades for the amount of input I put in? Like, you study alot only to get mediocre grades?
Well, let me break it down...
Input is important but... output is more important.
Input is absorbing information. Committing it to memory. Remembering facts. It's a mental activity.
Output is how you communicate or display information.
Let's be honest, the teacher correcting your paper doesn't care if you studied the whole year or the whole night. They just care about finishing their task and whether you've answered the questions correctly. So, the way you communicate it is important.
When you study, give more focus on the output. If you're input is "x" amount of effort then your concentration and effort on output should be "2x".
How do you do that?
Well, after studying, spend a good amount of time recalling the information by giving the processed information back. Whether you do it by saying it aloud or writing it down or both. I prefer to say it aloud, write it down and then say it again and again. The main thing is...
What you learnt must be communicated.
It doesn't have to be through teaching. There are multiple ways. Notes. Drawing. Visuals. Mind maps. Audio recordings. Anything that works for you!
Written notes is probably the best because at the end of the day you are going to write the exam, even if you know the whole damn textbook, what you write in your exam is the only thing that counts.
So, here's the secret (which isn't a secret anymore) i use:- When you finish a topic:
Write the key words.
Say it out loud multiple times until you remember them.
Close the notes and recall. Aloud.
Repeat step 2 & 3 about 4-5 times.
Bonus: you can write the points without looking this time.
Basically... Write it. Say it. Recall it. Repeat it.
The first 2 steps are the means of inputs. You're getting information in.
The next three are outputs. You're getting the information out. See the emphasis on how you recall it aloud? It needs your 100% attention for you to remember the points. And when you repeat it, it's literally for you to process it. To let it sink in. You're less likely to forget it sooner too.
Remember. X input needs 2x output.
Whatever the output is. It needs to be multiplied.
Hope this helps! :D
Funny thing how i actually didn't message up today's tryouts ... I'm thankful and shocked honestly... Anyway, nothing that interesting today, I've been making small progress everyday to atleast touch my textbooks... Midterms start from 18th .... No idea how I'm gonna complete everything in such a short period of time...
Today I:
Learnt some accounts topics
Prepared for debate
Finished 1 lesson in english
Completed Arabic assignment
You're getting distracted again. You've got dreams to chase. Not people to impress. Wake up.
It doesn't matter if you hadn't done the things you were supposed to do. It doesn't matter that if you finished 1 thing out of 4 things. You don't have 3 more things to do, you have 1 less thing to complete.
It doesn't matter if you had relapsed after a day or 3 of productivity and healing into a spiral again. What matters is that you get back up and start again. Because now you're a bit stronger and more resilient than before.
It doesn't matter if all you did today was getting out of bed, eat and change your clothes while you did nothing else. Appreciate yourself and give yourself the credit you deserve for doing those small things.
It doesn't matter if the only thing you did today was to focus on existing and on yourself alone. Be proud of surviving till the end of the day because you made it through knowing that there was a possibility of you not making it.
Progress is still progress. It doesn't matter if you take small or big steps. You're taking a step and that's all that matters.
Hey any last minute revision tips for tests/exams? I always struggle with it
Hey there Anon!
First of all, during revision, I try my level best to recall everything without actually going through the topic but it's kinda difficult so glance through the topic before you close the book and recall every single point.
Revise the chapters that you know well and are confident in first because it's better to thoroughly know some specific topics than being doubtful in every single topic.
Do not, under any circumstances, start to learn a new topic during revision (unless the topic is like really really important). It will only cause you panic.
If you find yourself distracted, move around alittle.
More distractions? Act like you're a tutor or teacher.
Don't study the whole topic line by line, recall important key words and examples.
Don't set a time limit for each topic. Set time limits for the whole syllabus. (Like, if you have 12 lessons. Think you'll complete 6 of them by the afternoon, allow 2 hours grace time and viola, you now know half the syllabus completely)
Take breaks. Both the 20 mins and 20 second breaks (-> 20 sec post)
Eat some snacks in between. I personally don't prefer meals because I get really lazy and sleepy after that.
Do not call your friends to ask how much they've revised because you'll definitely panick.
Go through your material. If you don't remember a topic which you actually have studied, write short notes just beside it.
Use past question papers and practice problems.
Quiz yourself. Say your answers out loud.
If you have no idea where to start, just go from the shortest chapters because then you'll feel like you have completed some syllabus.
Lastly, whatever you do, sleep early. Atleast before 11 pm because you need to be fresh for the exam.
Basically. Recall. Summarise. Quiz. Repeat.
Hope this helped! <3
So, what do I mean by using multiple senses? These senses usually employ in multisensory learning as visual, auditory, kinesthetic, and tactile – VAKT (i.e. seeing, hearing, doing, and touching)
Some may like to say the words out loud, some may like to hear them and many would prefer to write it down, some like getting hands on work and of course, depending on how you learn, they'll work for you but recently I've been using this method to study and it's so damn helpful.
The method I use is something that is applicable to mostly all subjects except maths and other subjects like physics or chemistry .
All you have to do is first you'll read the content then by looking at the content, you'll make notes about it. Draw small doodles related to it or draw a cycle of the content. Visualize the material! Then, you'll listen to the lecture notes or any videos about the content. And write more notes about it if you've missed any points! Then when you get the grasp of the material, you'll close the notes and you'll explain it to yourself aloud. Your voice needs to be loud and clear so you can hear it yourself. Then repeat! The more times you repeat explaining it to yourself, the better. Do it until you feel like you know the material well enough!
How does this help?
It uses the three main senses used for studying together which creates stronger connections in the brain
You're likely to remember the content for a longer period
Information will come rushing back in a matter of minutes if you had paid attention to it.
It helps you to remember main keywords easily
Enhances creativity
Is an active study method so you need to pay attention otherwise you won't be able to do this.
Hope this helps! Feel free to change this according to your needs. These methods can be experimented with! :)
Study until you think you are perfect and then study some more because you are never perfect.
You're not obliged to live your life fulfilling other people's dreams.
|| Isabelle || INFP-T || Study tips || Self improvement || Books ||
293 posts