On August 18 2009 15:07 OneOther wrote:
thanks, this thread was helpful for an anxious freshman in college
thanks, this thread was helpful for an anxious freshman in college
Noooo! Ray! You must resist!
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Saracen
United States5139 Posts
On August 18 2009 15:07 OneOther wrote: thanks, this thread was helpful for an anxious freshman in college Noooo! Ray! You must resist! | ||
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Mr. Maestro
Canada27 Posts
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skyglow1
New Zealand3962 Posts
With respect to med and motivation this is what I came up with: + Show Spoiler + The first thing to do is to work out exactly why you want to do medicine in your head. You can write down these reasons in huge font and pin them up on your wall, but I think most people want to keep something like that private, so you can just keep it somewhere safe. Whenever you feel lazy and you can’t be bothered to put in the work, remind yourself of these reasons. You are essentially putting yourself through hell for a year – having a clear mindset as to why you are putting yourself through hell helps you justify what would otherwise seem like a crazy thing to do. If you have solid reasons for having to do something, you are far more likely actually carry through with the act For me, medicine is a challenging profession, something that's worth getting good at, it provides rewarding work, opens up many options, provides financial security, and is interesting to study. “Because I want to make alot of money” is not a good reason – medicine is a stupid stupid choice if your goal is to make money. You work incredibly hard for a payoff that is so far away. “I want to help people” isn’t a good solid reason either – there are many other ways to help people, why do you want to help people through medicine is what you should be asking yourself. Why don't you be a nurse instead? What is it about medicine that interests or draws you? You should develop a set of reasons that are strong and clear, either in your head or written down in paper. Efficiency and self-assessment: + Show Spoiler + You basically want to be as efficient as possible in everything you do, like knowing what to learn, figuring out what’s the fastest and best way to learn it and so on. Quality over quantity. To be as efficient as possible, you need to constantly be doing self-assessment and evaluating the effectiveness of your note taking and study methods. Always be evaluating how you're taking notes and studying, and thinking "am I doing this efficiently?", "how could I improve on what I’m currently doing?" and "are there alternative ways of getting this done that might be better?" Aspects of your study to consider are things like: how much sleep do you need? Does using colour in your notes help? Diagrams? Explaining to other people? Repetition? Writing things or saying things out loud? Where do you study? Do you study well with music? Should you even spending the time to make super pretty notes with diagrams and pretty colours? etc. I ended up doing better than alot of those students who put in crazy amounts of hours of study even though I didn’t study near the number of hours they did. That’s because I was being as efficient as possible in everything I did and using my time wisely, so I didn’t need to put in that many hours. I had figured out what was the fastest way to learn for me during high school. Alot of students automatically assume from my marks that I must be putting in those crazy hours too. When I told them I was studying only x number of hours they'd be like "sure sure", which is not the correct mindset. More hours of work does not equal better marks if you are working poorly. Another example is sudy groups. This is a really popular thing amongst students trying to get into med. I never study in groups, because I usually end up answering other people's questions. Others say you learn by teaching and explaining things to others, but I already know that I understand the concepts fully so I don't need to 'over-study' it. I'd be better off moving on to the next bit of stuff to learn on my own. Think carefully about what you're doing when you're studying and try and avoid thigns that may appear beneficial but are simply time wasters. If you don't think you're studying as well as you could, then do some research on the internet, ask others etc. to try and get ideas to incorporate into your method of study. | ||
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Dknight
United States5223 Posts
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UGC4
Peru532 Posts
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Silvos87
United States38 Posts
http://www.calnewport.com/blog/ "The Study Hacks blog teaches students how to do (very) well without burning out. It preaches the idea that you should: do less; do better; and know why. The site is run by Cal Newport, MIT graduate student and author of the popular advice guides How to Become a Straight-A Student and How to Win at College." | ||
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L
Canada4732 Posts
Take Adderall. | ||
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Jibba
United States22883 Posts
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Tal
United Kingdom1017 Posts
In my first year of uni (which doesn't count towards your final mark in the UK), and first half of the second (which does), I got really inconsistent marks. I found it frustrating that most of the time when I tried to be really creative with my arguments, I got worse marks, and that so much was down to exams - which I have always found difficult. I told my friend that I felt I was smart enough to get a first, but that the system was flawed - it didn't reward creativity, and essentially made you jump through hoops to hit mark scheme points. His response was that if I was so smart, I should have no trouble dealing with a system like that - I should be able to learn and play the academic game without too much trouble. To cut a long story short, I found out he was right. By focusing on playing the academic game instead of satisfying my ego, I was able to massively improve my grades, and scraped a first overall. | ||
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L
Canada4732 Posts
On August 19 2009 03:45 Jibba wrote: Not as helpful as you think it's really easy to spot adderall induced papers because they look like this and the authors many more words than are necessary to express their thoughts and they write sentences longer than fucking Proust except that he knew how to use punctuation. The 10 hours I save on procrastination can easily spare one or two in order to proof the paper. | ||
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zizou21
United States3683 Posts
On August 19 2009 03:17 L wrote: Easiest method: Take Adderall. ![]() | ||
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SWPIGWANG
Canada482 Posts
"project" courses is another matter >.<b Having on average 20% lower marks out of project courses was what messed my GPA up..... | ||
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Jibba
United States22883 Posts
On August 19 2009 03:49 L wrote: Show nested quote + On August 19 2009 03:45 Jibba wrote: Not as helpful as you think it's really easy to spot adderall induced papers because they look like this and the authors many more words than are necessary to express their thoughts and they write sentences longer than fucking Proust except that he knew how to use punctuation. The 10 hours I save on procrastination can easily spare one or two in order to proof the paper. Really? You plan ahead to get your paper writing done ahead of time with the help of adderall? Because if you can do that, why not just work on it diligently from the beginning? Most people use it as a way to cram 20 pages in the night before something is due, and as a result they end up turning in something similar to the crap I wrote up there. | ||
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skyglow1
New Zealand3962 Posts
On August 19 2009 03:12 Silvos87 wrote: This blog supplies a voluminous amount of methods & strategies: http://www.calnewport.com/blog/ "The Study Hacks blog teaches students how to do (very) well without burning out. It preaches the idea that you should: do less; do better; and know why. The site is run by Cal Newport, MIT graduate student and author of the popular advice guides How to Become a Straight-A Student and How to Win at College." Cheers for the link, this site is awesome. | ||
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klizzer
517 Posts
On August 18 2009 15:11 Saracen wrote: Show nested quote + On August 18 2009 15:07 OneOther wrote: thanks, this thread was helpful for an anxious freshman in college Noooo! Ray! You must resist! You too... er, Saracen! Well, the tips are pretty standard. Study hard and focus ![]() | ||
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