Are you a high school senior who can't wait to get to college? College is fun, but it's also a whole different world from high school. You'll have more autonomy than ever before, but with autonomy comes responsibility. Here are some tips from the folks at Quantum U, the college prep camp for incoming college freshmen, that will help you get off to the right start when you go to college.
Get the most from your time in class
It's as simple as S.L.A.N.T. Sit near the front and in the middle section of the classroom or auditorium. Lean slightly forward in your chair, as if you are hanging on the professor's every word. Ask questions to clarify anything you don't understand. Nod your head to show you are listening and interested. Talk to your professor after class to build rapport and establish a relationship.
Make the most of your study time
Try to design as optimum a study area as you can in your dorm. Ideally, it should include good lighting, a desk or table to work at, a comfortable chair, inspirational posters, and plants. It helps if you can play relaxing music softly in the background. Tackle the most difficult assignments first. Every thirty minutes take a short five-minute break. Take mini-breaks more often by standing up and stretching whenever you notice your mind wandering. Studies show that you remember best what you learned just before and just after a break so the more breaks, the more you learn!
Take the tension out of taking tests
Sometimes test-time jitters can ruin the time you spend studying and preparing. So, allow yourself enough time to get to class a few minutes early hurrying causes tension and mental crunches, and you can use the few extra minutes to review your notes one last time. Before and during the test, give yourself positive messages: I know this information and I'm going to get an A. If you feel yourself getting tense, close your eyes for a moment and take a few deep breaths. Imagine a relaxing scene, then refocus.
Discover the Power of This is it!
This is it! means making the most of every moment. It also means doing whatever it takes to make a subject interesting. Be creative! Some ideas include studying with a friend or relating the topic to something you already know or like. When you know something well, you almost always find it interesting.
Cultivate a Winning Attitude
Maintaining a positive attitude is your most important learning asset. You need to mentally prepare before any learning experience. Henry Ford said, If you think you can, you can. If you think you can't, you can't. Either way, you are right.
Remember the "F" Stands for Feedback
From infancy through adulthood, we learn through our mistakes. Remember to learn from the feedback you get from others, whether it is a failed test or a poor relationship. In your path to become an excellent college student, feedback is simply the information you need to succeed. Don't forget that the "F" also stands for Failure leads to success!
Plan Ahead
Time management is one of the biggest challenges new college students face. Your life at college can be fragmented, intense and sometimes overwhelming: large classes, unstructured time, professors who all think their course is your one and only priority. A typical day, if there is such a thing, can include classes, library time, friends, work, maybe a workout in there somewhere. It's definitely not high school. Use a calendar to mark days for tests or due dates of important papers. Studying ahead reduces stress and increases your ability to remember at test time.
Summer Camp Jobs For College Students
One major difference between high school and college is the amount of studying and memorization that is required. Many young people worry that their memories aren't up to the task when it comes to schoolwork. Here again it's a matter of training. Even though there are gazillions of ways to improve memory,
schools don't do much to help students learn how to train their memories.
Fear of inadequate memory can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The more people worry about their ability to remember, the less they focus on the information they're trying to remember. At our college prep program, we help teens discover just how much they're capable of doing and provide them with strategies for getting information to stick in their brains. We use rhymes, songs, stories, colors, smells, people, even animals, associating items to remember with locations around the room, or characters in a movie. The goal is to find ways to give the material the strongest impact.
One of the best ways we've found to memorize a chunk of information is to tell it as a crazy story. Sometimes we tell campers the following story without explaining anything beforehand about what it means:
You walk into a deli and order a sandwich and it comes to you with pens stuck in it. You say "Ugh!" and throw it out the window. It lands on a man's bright orange jersey. You go outside and apologize and the man yells, "By George, you've ruined my jersey!" You run away quickly and he can't come after you because his feet are connected to cuts in the sidewalk. To be sure you've escaped you duck into a nearby Catholic church during a Mass. You duck out and go into a music store owned by Marilyn. You walk in and hear a Southern carol playing loudly on the stereo. Suddenly, out of the floor come hundreds of baby new hamsters. They pick you up and carry you off to a forest full of girls named Virginia playing harps. It's peaceful in the Virginia forest until the New York Yankees come out from behind the trees swinging. A ball is hit. You are hit by the ball. You're taken to a hospital where you have to wait in the North Care line. When you feel better, you jump out into traffic and barely make it to the road island. On that island you look down and see a bunch of disgusting vermin oozing up from the ground, sticking to your bare feet. You scream, "Oh, rats!"
Campers can easily memorize this story because of its absurdity and vivid details. Only after it's already in their heads do we reveal that they've also just learned the first fourteen states that ratified the U.S. Constitution - and the order in which they ratified it!
These memorization techniques work because they cause the information we're learning to have a greater impact on our brains. By attaching information to a rhyme, a body movement, a color, a bizarre image, a location, a sensory experience, or an emotion, we're anchoring the memory in our minds by more than one connection. We're getting more than one part of the brain in on the action by using visual, auditory, and kinesthetic strategies. Not only does it work, it makes memorization a lot more fun.
When teens realize how much their minds are really capable of, their confidence skyrockets.
Both James Hartley & Jim Hartley are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
James Hartley has sinced written about articles on various topics from Education. The most common phrase uttered by campers as they leave is, "It was the best 10 days of my life!" Maybe that single statement is the best indication that academic summer camps, and SuperCamp in particular, are in no way like summer school. Learn more abou. James Hartley's top article generates over 720 views. to your Favourites.
Jim Hartley has sinced written about articles on various topics from Family, self improvement and motivation and Family. SuperCamp is held at eight beautiful colleges across the U.S. throughout the summer. Quantum U takes place at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. More information on our programs is available at. Jim Hartley's top article generates over 18100 views. to your Favourites.
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