The Stereotype of Studying: Breaking the Mold

Studies in high school or college have received such a bad rep. Name anyone who can actually say they like doing it; you won’t find many. The fact is studying is difficult. It’s time consuming, draining, and stressful. But guess what?

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There’s a Way to Battle the Lack of Motivation!

That is probably the number-one cause to a lack of studying habits: many students become unmotivated. Here’s why: take your job, for instance; if you don’t show up for the workday, your boss will definitely care, instilling you this motivation that says…. “I do not want to get fired!” However, with studying…. It’s a different story. You don’t study, and no one will care. Your fellow students won’t care, your professor won’t care, maybe even your parents won’t care. After all, you’re one your own, you’re paying for your tuition, room and board. Why should anyone else care?

This fundamental truth lends to you the true secret to motivating yourself, breaking the mold of un-motivation: it’s called a reward.

Reward Yourself? How So?

Seriously, reward yourself for studying so hard! Because you have so little reinforcement when it comes to studying, it’s up to you to pat yourself on the back when you do a good job. Your reward, of course, can be whatever you like it to be.

Try it and marvel at the results. The more you do it, the more you set up an actual routine. It’s like working out, only for the brain. Soon you’ll find your brain pumping iron so hard that it’ll make your bicep look like a bumpkin!

 

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No Cramming Allowed

It’s a biological, undisputed fact: our brains actually retain more information not when we constantly stuff it with information until we’re sure it stays there, rather when we quickly file it away and mark the location!

Take this analogy: the library. As typical of many of these establishments, how they’re organized matters. If the organization is off a bit, you’ll find many visitors having a lot of trouble locating the books they want.

Disorganization can happen several ways: one of them is constant ‘cramming’ of books, stuffing them on the shelves, moving too fast, getting too overworked. The result is poor organization, less neatness among the aisles, and more dissatisfied guests to your library.

Can you imagine how your brain would feel if you were cramming and not studying?

The two words aren’t synonymous at all. Don’t be fooled. When you study in short spurts, you actually remember a lot more of what you read and drilled.

This goes in line with the fact that your body needs the rest, so don’t stay up late at night burning the books with the midnight oil and burying your brain in all the crazy mess that is the information you’ll never remember because you didn’t give your head enough rest. It should be plainly obvious that your brain works a lot easier if you had enough sleep the night before.

Repeat for emphasis: no cramming allowed. That’s Basic Studying 101. If you want a better chance at a good test score, study in short periods over a long stretch of time. You’ll see that the “A” will come a lot easier!

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