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QED

(2,747 posts)
Mon Aug 7, 2017, 08:34 PM Aug 2017

A Stanford researchers 15-minute study hack lifts B+ students into the As

As a teacher, I find teaching kids how to study to a challenge. When they get to me, they are so accustomed to memorizing and plugging numbers into formulas that they don't know how to reflect on what formulas mean or how concepts connect.

A Stanford researcher’s 15-minute study hack lifts B+ students into the As

"Policy makers, tech executives, teachers, and parents are forever trying to find new ways to improve kids’ performance at school. Schools design and redesign curricula, teachers embrace and reject new learning technologies, and parents plot ways to get their kids to study more.

One novel solution researchers find helps kids to perform better is to get them to think about how they think—metacognition—and have them strategize how they study.

If this sounds easy, it is not. “All too often, students just jump mindlessly into studying before they have even strategized what to use, without understanding why they are using each resource, and without planning out how they would use the resource to learn effectively,” says Patricia Chen, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford with a PhD. “I find this very unfortunate because it undermines their own potential to learn well and perform well.”

But students can be taught to think strategically about thinking and studying, says Chen, the lead author of a new study about the practice, and parents can prompt this type of learning by posing some strategic questions of their own."


https://qz.com/978273/a-stanford-professors-15-minute-study-hack-improves-test-grades-by-a-third-of-a-grade/

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A Stanford researchers 15-minute study hack lifts B+ students into the As (Original Post) QED Aug 2017 OP
It's good to have a plan underpants Aug 2017 #1
That was intense! QED Aug 2017 #2
Brutal underpants Aug 2017 #3

underpants

(182,769 posts)
1. It's good to have a plan
Mon Aug 7, 2017, 09:02 PM
Aug 2017

Summer of '96. Two years back at school after a stint in the Army and working in a lumber yard/waiting tables/delivering pizza

In order to graduate in December I had to take 4 summer classes. I couldn't squeeze them into my schedule before or after.

7:30 am ingest food
8am-1pm class time
Ingest food
1pm to 4 maybe 5 work at the student commons
Ingest food
Sleep until midnight - the woman I'd just broken up with still lived in the same house so I lived in the "spare room"
12am - 7:30am study write prepare for tests.
7:30 ingest food

A week worth of class each day. Two classes at a time back to back.

At the very end I ran into a guy I'd been in classes with thoughout the accounting program. He looked right at me and said "You look like shit". I had barely seen the sun all summer.

I had a plan and I became very good at it. 3 A's and 1 B.

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