
09:58

Executive Republic
culled from:pickthebrain.com
Use 30-Day Trials. Popularized by Steve Pavlina,
trial periods work under the principle that by committing to a change
for a month, it will become a habit. Since it is study techniques you
want to reinforce, pick one or two habits and work on them for an entire
month.
The Learn-It-Once Approach. Spend your time
learning things as they come up in your courses. Attend classes with the
perspective that you could be tested at any moment. It should only be
material that you were just presented that you might not have had time
to fully learn. Waiting before tests, assignments or finals is taking
things too far.
Morning Review. Wake up a half hour earlier and
spend that time reading from your textbook. If you’ve already read the
chapters, spend the time rewriting the key concepts into a notebook. A
half-hour out of your day in the morning probably won’t create a huge
impact on your schedule, yet over the entire term it can be invaluable
in boosting your understanding.
Link Courses to Daily Life. Spend some time each
week looking for practical ways you can use the information you are
learning. If you can find situations from your daily life that are
similar to your subjects, they can go from abstract theories to concrete
tools.
Background Reading. Invest some of your time each
week in reading the background of the ideas surrounding your subjects.
Pick out interesting topics in the news or books that make use of ideas
from your field of study. Background reading can reinforce the ideas by connecting them with reality.
Set Daily Study Times. Set periods of time that you
will spend studying each day. Once you spend a month reinforcing these
learning periods, it will become automatic. Regular studying times
prevent the need for cramming and can give you consistency in your
schedule.
Cut Wasted Time. I’ve had classes where I received
an A+, yet I attended less than a third of the lectures. I have had
courses where I didn’t buy or read the textbook. Talk to other
classmates about how the course is graded (mostly textbook, mostly
lectures, etc.) and use that as a basis for deciding where to cut time
if you have to. Skipping a class can be a good strategy if it means you
could better learn the subject on your own.
Focus on Learning, Not Grades. Grades are just an
artificial marker used to assess how much you’ve learned. While they are
useful as a measurement tool, focusing on grades over understanding and
learning useful ideas wastes your time. Look for ways you can use the
material you are learning and focus on understanding it first, put
grades afterwards.
Read Papers Upside Down. A good editing habit when
checking over your essays and assignments is to read them upside down.
This prevents you from speed reading the page and missing grammatical or
sentence structure errors. This also gives you a better feeling of how
an essay might be read through fresh eyes, letting you improve your
style.
The 10-Year Old Rule. Pretend you had to teach
everything in your course to a ten-year old. Could you do it? While
advanced theoretical physics might not be comprehensible by a young
child, the idea is that you should be able to simplify your subject into
easily understandable pictures and metaphors. If you can do this for
yourself, it will make your job far easier for remembering later.
Seek Your Professors. A great tip from Tim Ferriss
in the 4-Hour Workweek involves what to do if you get a bad mark on a
paper. He recommends meeting your professor during office hours and
asking for suggestions for improvement. Tim recommends that you exhaust
every possible question, staying for an hour or two if you have to. By
doing this you will not only have a wealth of information about how
papers are marked, but your professor will also hesitate to give you a
lousy mark in the future.
Schedule a Balance. Compress your work and studying
into the weekdays and mornings so you don’t need to work all of the
time. Good habits also involve taking time for rest as well.
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