5. Don’t sit in the back of the room. Successful
students minimize classroom distractions that interfere with learning. Students
want the best seat available for their entertainment dollars, but willingly
seek the worst seat for their educational dollars. Students who sit in the back
cannot possibly be their professor’s teammate. Why do they expose themselves to
the temptations of inactive classroom experiences and distractions of all the
people between them and their instructor? Of course, we know they chose the back of the
classroom because they seek invisibility or anonymity, both of which are
antithetical to efficient and effective learning. If you are trying not to be
part of the class, why, then, are you wasting your time? Push your hot buttons;
is there something else you would be dong with your time?
6. . . . take good notes. Successful students take notes that are understandable
and organized, and review them often.
Why put
something into your notes you don’t understand? Ask the questions now that are necessary
to make your notes while the material is still fresh on your mind helps your
learn more. The more you learn then, the less you’ll have to learn later and
the less time it will take it will take because you won’t have to include some
deciphering time, also. The whole purpose of taking notes is to use them, and
use them often. The more you use them, the more they improve.
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