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Concentration
1. Set aside a place for study and study only!
A. Find a specific place (or places) that you can use for
studying (for example, the campus libraries, vacant classrooms, quiet areas in
the student center, bedroom at home, etc.)
B. Make a place specific to studying. You are trying to
build a habit of studying when you are in this place. So, don't use your study
space for social conversations, writing letters, daydreaming, etc.
C. Insure that your study area has the following:
- good lighting
- ventilation
- a comfortable chair, but not too comfortable
- a desk large enough to spread out your
materials
D. Insure that your study area does not have the
following:
- a distracting view of other activities that you
want to be involved in
- a telephone
- a loud stereo
- a 27-inch color TV
- a roommate or friend who wants to talk a lot
- a refrigerator stocked with scrumptious
goodies
2. Divide your work into small, short-range
goals.
A. Don't set a goal as vague and large as ... "I am going to
spend all day Saturday studying!" You will only set yourself up for failure and
discouragement.
B. Take the time block that you have scheduled for study and
set a reachable study goal. (for example: finish reading 3 sections of chapter
seven in my Psych. text, or complete one math problem, or write the rough draft
of the introduction to my English paper, etc.)
C. Set your goal when you sit down to study but before you
begin to work.
Set a goal that you can reach. You may, in fact, do more
than your goal but set a reasonable goal even if it seems too easy.
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