Pages

Thursday, March 7, 2013


The Power of Study Groups


Part 4

Getting the Most Out of a Session

Here are some tips to help get your group get the most out of each study session:

·         Decide what you’re going to do in advance

·         Prepare for the session, so you can make the most out of your time together

·         Take turns teaching, to reinforce your own knowledge.

·         Stick to the session topic

By supplementing your individual study group, you can reinforce what you’ve learned, deepen your understanding of complex concepts, and maybe even make a few new friends. Remember that a friend is a person who encourages you to do your best and to achieve on a high level, one who pushes you to try a little harder and a little better. If someone pulls you down the wrong trails of life, then those people are not friends, (they are actually your enemies), and you must avoid them at all cost. Whoever said learning can’t be fun? Learning is enjoyable and exciting when you study with others.

CHOOSE THE RIGHT!!!

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Power of Study of Study groups


The Power of Study of Study groups


Part 2

The benefits of study groups

Group study offers other advantages in addition to gaining a deeper understanding of class material. These include the opportunity to: Reinforce note-taking. If your AP Biology notes are unclear, you can ask a member of your study group to help you fill the gaps. Share talents. Each person brings different strengths, such as organizational skills, the ability to stick to a task or a capacity for memorization.

Cover more ground. Group members may be able to solve a calculus problem together that none would have solved alone.

Benefit from a support system. Members often have common goals, such as good grades. Each person’s work affects the other members, which results in making members supportive of one another. Socialize. It’s more fun to study with others; the give-and-take makes it more interesting. And because it’s more fun, you spend more time studying!


CHOOSE THE RIGHT!!!

Monday, March 4, 2013

Reflection





Student Success Statement

“In life as in football, you won’t go far, unless you know where the goalposts are.”

-Arnold Glasgow

I agree with this quote, one must have a sense of direction to get far in life, if not one might end up anywhere. If one has goals like going to college, they have a better chance of succeeding in life.
 

The Power of Study Groups


The Power of Study Groups


part1

Working Together Helps Everyone

You may have noticed that when youre explaining something you’ve learned to a friend, you begin to understand it better yourself. This happens because, when you explain an idea, you need to think more deeply about it.

The same principle makes study groups useful. Studying with others in a small group is helpful because you:

·         Think out loud

·         Share ideas

·         Learn from one another

In an effective study group, you and other students hash out lesson materials together—explaining concepts, arguing about the, figuring out why one person’s answer differs from another’s—and in the process, you most likely learn more than you would have studying by yourself.
CHOOSE THE RIGHT!!!
 
 

Friday, March 1, 2013

Walk the Talk

Reflection

 The video is talking about how we should practice what we preach and to do the simple things that can help us become a better person, like have respect and honesty.




Student Success Statement

“Nobody ever did, or ever will, escape the consequences of his choices.”

-Albert A. Montapert

 I agree with this statement, one does not get away with things without facing his consequences and one’s hard work does not go unnoticed.

How to Take on College Studying


How to Take on College Studying

Part 3

Do the Reading

You need to do more than just read the chapters you are assigned—you’re expected to understand them thoroughly. Here are some tips:

·         Don’t skim. Read all the material carefully.

·         Break up the difficult assignments into sections you can digest—chapters, subsections or even paragraphs.

·         Look up any words that you don’t understand.

·         Pause to think about whether you understand the material; ask questions in class about anything that is unclear.

·         Take notes instead of highlighting—this makes you think through and rephrase the key points.

·         Create a summary sheet of what you learned from each assignment you read.

CHOOSE THE RIGHT!!!

https://www.dropbox.com/s/gnt8e7rjayrmpdk/How%20to%20Take%20on%20College%20Studyin2.docx