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Scheduling for memorize
Being successful at the university level will probably
require a more careful and effective utilization of time than the student
has ever achieved before. He is typically scheduled for fifteen or more
hours of classroom work per week, in addition, he is expected to average
about two hours of preparation for each hour in the classroom. This means
that he has at least a forty-five hour work week and is consequently
involved in a full-time occupation! Many students find that this full-time
job must be supplemented by other part-time jobs and/or family and social
responsibilities which add a great deal more time. A common student
complaint, therefore, is that there is just not enough time to go
around.
The job of being a university student, like most other
jobs, can be carried out either efficiently or inefficiently. The way we
use time (or waste it) is largely a matter of habit patterns. One of the
best techniques for developing more efficient habits of time use is to
prepare a time schedule. Research psychologist and efficiency experts can
produce impressive statistics demonstrating the efficiency of a
well-organized time schedule. The work habits of people who have achieved
outstanding success invariably show a well-designed pattern or schedule.
When a person has several duties confronting him simultaneously he often
will fail to do any of them. The purpose of scheduling is not to make a
slave of the student, but to free him from the scholastic inefficiency and
anxiety that is, at least partially, a function of wasted time, inadequate
planning, hasty, last minute study, etc.
The most successful system for most students is to
combine long-range and short-range planning. thus, a student can make a
general schedule for an entire quarter and then prepare a more specific
plan for two or three days a week at a time.
LONG-RANGE SCHEDULE: Some suggestions for developing a
long-range strategy - i.e., a quarter schedule.
1. PLAN ENOUGH TIME FOR STUDY.
The University expects a student to average about two
hours in studying (including library work, term papers, themes, etc.) for
each hour spent in the classroom. This is an appropriate and realistic
guideline. A genuinely high ability student may get by adequately with
less. However, many students would do well to plan for somewhat more than
the two-for-one ratio.
2. STUDY AT THE SAME TIME EVERY DAY.
In so far as possible, a student should schedule
certain hours which are used for studying almost every day in a habitual,
systematic way. Having regular hours at least five days a week will make
it easier to habitually follow the schedule and to maintain an active
approach to study.
3. MAKE USE OF THE FREE HOURS DURING THE SCHOOL
DAY.
The hours between classes are perhaps a student's most
valuable study time yet, ironically, the most frequently misused. A
student may effectively utilize these hours reviewing the material and
editing the notes of the preceding class and/or studying the material to
be discussed in the following class.
4. PLAN STUDY PERIODS TO FOLLOW CLASS PERIODS.
This should be done whenever possible. The next best
procedure is to schedule the period for study immediately preceding the
class. A student should specify the particular course he will study rather
than just marking "study" on his schedule.
5. SPACE STUDY PERIODS.
Fifty to ninety minutes of study at a time for each
course works best. Relaxation periods of ten or fifteen minutes should be
scheduled between study periods. It is more efficient to study hard for a
definite period of time, and then stop for a few minutes, than attempt to
study on indefinitely.
6. PLAN FOR WEEKLY REVIEWS.
At least one hour each week for each class (distinct
from study time) should be scheduled. The weekend is a good time for
review.
7. LEAVE SOME UNSCHEDULED TIME FOR
FLEXIBILITY.
This is important! Lack of flexibility is the major
reason why schedules fail. Students tend to over-schedule
themselves.
8. ALLOT TIME FOR PLANNED RECREATION, CAMPUS AND
CHURCH ACTIVITIES., etc.
When a student plans his schedule, he should begin by
listing the activities that come at fixed hours and cannot be changed.
Classes and laboratories, eating in the dorm dining hall, sleep, and work
for money are examples of time uses which the student typically cannot
alter. Next, he can schedule his flexible time commitments. these hours
can be interchanged with other hours if he finds that his schedule must be
changed during the week. Recreational activities are planned
last.
When forced to deviate from his planned schedule (and
that will invariably occur), the student should trade time rather than
steal it from his schedule. Thus, if he has an unexpected visitor at a
time he has reserved for study, he can substitute an equal amount of study
time for the period he had set aside for recreation.
Time scheduling will not make you a perfectly efficient person. Very
few people can rigorously keep a detailed schedule day after day over a long period of
time. In fact, many students who draw up a study schedule and find themselves unable to
stick to it become impatient and often give up the scheduling idea completely.
The following method of organizing time has been helpful to many
students and does not take much time. It is more flexible than many methods and helps the
student to establish long term, intermediate, and short term time goals.