7 Tried-and-True Study Tips
Studying is hard, especially when you鈥檙e just getting used to college classes or transitioning from introductory courses to higher-level studies. But it doesn鈥檛 have to be so hard that you feel like you鈥檙e not getting anywhere! Read on to learn tried and true techniques for mastering your classes while still having time to enjoy your life at 海角社区黑料吃瓜.
- 1. Ask for Help
- One of the best ways to get ahead in your education is to take advantage of your professors鈥 office hours. Zach Liebman 鈥16 says, 鈥淣ot only will going to office hours help you better understand the material and expectations of the class, but it also gives you an opportunity to build a relationship with your professor.鈥
- You can also take advantage of the many helpful resources that the Academic Advising Office has to offer, including tutoring, appointments at the Writing, Reading, and Speaking Center, and tons of great worksheets and tips.
- 2. Test Yourself
- When it comes to studying for a test or brushing up on an area you鈥檝e struggled with, Evelyn Weidman 鈥17 suggests inventing your own problems for practice. 鈥淏y making your own problems and examples, you do a whole other level of thinking than if you just review the examples from class and homework that you already have,鈥 says Weidman. This process can help you to identify areas that you need to work on and will help eliminate the fear of 鈥渢rick questions鈥 many experience on test day.
- 3. Visualize Success
- To deal with math problems that seem complicated, Karin Yndestad 鈥17 recommends using visual learning techniques. 鈥淲henever possible, draw a picture. Visualizing the problem that you are working on often gives you unexpected insight on how best to solve it,鈥 Yndestad says. She also suggests students write out and prove theorems from scratch without using notes, rather than just repeating from memory. 鈥淭his forces you to really understand the methods behind the proof, and it also helps you commit important ideas to memory.鈥
- 4. Procrastination = Motivation?
- Having trouble staying motivated when all you want to do is relax? Try setting up a reward system to turn activities that you normally use to procrastinate into prizes for a job well done. After completing a reading or homework assignment, Carlina Arango 鈥16 rewards herself with a TV show on Netflix or a massage in the Wellness Lounge. 鈥淚t helps you stay focused, and time goes by faster if you learn how to balance studying with a bit of relaxing in between,鈥 says Arango.
- 5. Talk the Talk
- Vocabulary flash cards not doing the trick? For increasing fluency in a language, Philipp Gemmel 鈥17 advocates practicing paraphrasing. 鈥淲hen learning a language, it is completely fine to not know something, but knowing how to say something you don鈥檛 know by describing it with something you do know helps a lot,鈥 Gemmel says. Too shy to practice with other people? Try talking to yourself! Gemmel says this is a good way to build confidence through 鈥減erfectly pressure-free practice.鈥
- 6. Begin at the End
- For students wracking their brains on how to begin a paper, Katy Tucker 鈥16 has a trick. 鈥淭ry writing the first draft of your paper backwards. This strategy can help identify your strongest thesis and has the added benefit of motivating you to keep writing,鈥 Tucker says. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 less overwhelming to feel as though you鈥檙e continually adding on evidence to your argument rather than constructing a perfectly organized paper from scratch.鈥
- 7. Sleep
-
It might surprise you that the study tip 海角社区黑料吃瓜ians raved about isn鈥檛 even about studying.
鈥淪leep. Sleep. Sleep. Sleep. Sleep,鈥 says Liebman.
鈥淪leep is more important than studying,鈥 Isaac Mielke 鈥18 says.
鈥淕et sleep. Really,鈥 says Amanda Hinchman-Dominguez 鈥17.
It may seem like a good idea to take advantage of all 海角社区黑料吃瓜 life has to offer by following the 鈥淚鈥檒l sleep when I鈥檓 dead鈥 philosophy, but if you鈥檙e tired your brain isn鈥檛 working at full capacity. Trying to function on only a few hours of sleep means it takes you longer to understand what you鈥檙e studying, finish a problem set, or write a paper. Sleep equals more efficient studying, which equals more time to enjoy life!
Zach Liebman 鈥16 is an economics major from Evanston, Ill. Evelyn Weidman 鈥17 is from Flossmoor, Ill. and is an economics major. Karin Yndestad 鈥17 is a mathematics major from Eagan, Minn. Carlina Arango 鈥16, a Spanish and anthropology double major, is from Chicago, Ill. Philipp Gemmel 鈥17 is a political science and biology double major from Gusenburg, Germany. Katy Tucker 鈥16, from Wellesley, Mass., is a psychology major. Isaac Mielke 鈥18 is an economics major from Falcon Heights, Minn. Amanda Hinchman-Dominguez 鈥17 is from Titusville, Fla. and is a computer science major.