Successful Students Guidelines
Successful Students
Successful students exhibit a combination of successful attitudes and
behaviors as well as intellectual capacity. Successful students . . .
. . . are responsible and active. Successful students get involved
in their studies, accept responsibility for their own education, and are
active participants in it!
Responsibility means control. It's the difference between
leading and being led. Your own efforts control your grade, you earn the
glory or deserve the blame, you make the choice. Active classroom participation
improves grades without increasing study time. You can sit there, act bored,
daydream, or sleep. Or, you can actively listen, think, question, and take
notes like someone in charge of their learning experience. Either option
costs one class period. However, the former method will require a large
degree of additional work outside of class to achieve the same degree of
learning the latter provides at one sitting. The choice is yours.
. . . have educational goals. Successful students have legitimate goals
and are motivated by what they represent in terms of career aspirations
and life's desires.
Ask yourself these questions: What am I doing here? Why have I chosen
to be sitting here now? Is there some better place I could be? What does
my presence here mean to me? Answers to these questions represent your
"Hot Buttons" and are, without a doubt, the most important factors
in your success as a college student. If your educational goals are truly
yours, not someone else's, they will motivate a vital and positive academic
attitude. If you are familiar with what these hot buttons represent and
refer to them often, especially when you tire of being a student, nothing
can stop you; if you aren't and don't, everything can, and will!
. . . ask questions. Successful students ask questions to provide the
quickest route between ignorance and knowledge.
In addition to securing knowledge you seek, asking questions has at
least two other extremely important benefits. The process helps you pay
attention to your professor and helps your professor pay attention to you!
Think about it. If you want something, go after it. Get the answer now,
or fail a question later. There are no foolish questions, only foolish
silence. It's your choice.
. . . learn that a student and a professor make a team. Most instructors
want exactly what you want: they would like for you to learn the material
in their respective classes and earn a good grade.
Successful students reflect well on the efforts of any teacher; if
you have learned your material, the instructor takes some justifiable pride
in teaching. Join forces with your instructor, they are not an enemy, you
share the same interests, the same goals - in short, you're teammates.
Get to know your professor. You're the most valuable players on the same
team. Your jobs are to work together for mutual success. Neither wishes
to chalk up a losing season. Be a team player!
. . . don't sit in the back. 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
(see no. 4). 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 their something else you should be doing with your time?
. . . 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 meaningful
at some later time. A short review of 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 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.
. . . understand that actions affect learning. Successful students
know their personal behavior affect their feelings and emotions which in
turn can affect learning.
If you act in a certain way that normally produces particular
feelings, you will begin to experience those feelings. Act like you're
bored, and you'll become bored. Act like you're disinterested, and you'll
become disinterested. So the next time you have trouble concentrating in
the classroom, "act" like an interested person: lean forward,
place your feet flat on the floor, maintain eye contact with the professor,
nod occasionally, take notes, and ask questions. Not only will you benefit
directly from your actions, your classmates and professor may also get
more excited and enthusiastic.
. . . talk about what they're learning. Successful students get to
know something well enough that they can put it into words.
Talking about something, with friends or classmates,
is not only good for checking whether or not you know something, its a
proven learning tool. Transferring ideas into words provides the most direct
path for moving knowledge from short-term to long-term memory. You really
don't "know" material until you can put it into words. So, next
time you study, don't do it silently. Talk about notes, problems, readings,
etc. with friends, recite to a chair, organize an oral study group, pretend
you're teaching your peers. "Talk-learning" produces a whole
host of memory traces that result in more learning.
. . . don't cram for exams. Successful students know that divided periods
of study are more effective than cram sessions, and they practice it.
If there is one thing that study skills specialists agree
on, it is that distributed study is better than massed, late-night, last-ditch
efforts known as cramming. You'll learn more, remember more, and earn a
higher grade by studying in four, one hour-a-night sessions for Friday's
exam than studying for four hours straight on Thursday night. Short, concentrated
preparatory efforts are more efficient and rewarding than wasteful, inattentive,
last moment marathons. Yet, so many students fail to learn this lesson
and end up repeating it over and over again until it becomes a wasteful
habit. Not too clever, huh?
. . . are good time managers. Successful students do not procrastinate.
They have learned that time control is life control and have consciously
chosen to be in control of their life.
An elemental truth: you will either control time or be
controlled by it! It's your choice: you can lead or be led, establish control
or relinquish control, steer your own course or follow others. Failure
to take control of their own time is probably the no. 1 study skills problem
for college students. It ultimately causes many students to become non-students!
Procrastinators are good excuse-makers. Don't make academics harder on
yourself than it has to be. Stop procrastinating. And don't wait until
tomorrow to do it!
The 10 items listed above are paraphrased from an article by Larry M
Ludewig called Ten Commandments for Effective Study Skills which appeared
in The Teaching Professor, December, 1992.
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Student Responsibilities
Students have the right to seize the responsibility for their own destiny
and should be encouraged to do so. With every right comes responsibility!
- I have the responsibility to come to every class prepared to listen,
to participate, and to learn.
- I have the responsibility to read the text carefully, noting important
ideas and rephrasing concepts in my own words.
- I have the responsibility to work examples in the textbook and those
given in class.
- I have the responsibility to consult other students, the teacher, an
assistant, and other resources whenever I need the extra help.
- I have the responsibility to understand that the teacher is not primarily
responsible for making me understand, but that it is my job to study and
to learn.
- I have the responsibility of keeping an open mind and trying to comprehend
what the teacher is trying to get across.
- I have the responsibility to do every bit of assigned homework with
proper attention and thought.
- I have the responsibility to view my teacher as a partner in my education.
- I have the responsibility to understand that I am not the only student
in my class, and that if I fall behind the class, not all of my catching
up is appropriate for the classroom setting.
- I have the responsibility to act as a competent adult.
- I have the responsibility of trying to integrate the concepts being
taught into other courses and other areas of my life.
- I have the responsibility to be polite and open to my teacher and classmates.
- I have the responsibility to accept that my work will be evaluated
in terms of what skills any student in the course is expected to master.
by Lynne Marie Rodell, Christian Brothers University, Tennessee. From:
The Teaching Professor , January 1994, p.3
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"A" and "C"profiles
Successful students can be distinguished from the average student by
their attitudes and behaviors. Below are some profiles that typically distinguish
between an "A" student and a "C" student. Where do
you fit in this scheme?
The "A" Student - An Outstanding Student
- ATTENDANCE: "A" students have virtually perfect attendance.
Their commitment to the class is a high priority and exceeds other temptations.
- PREPARATION: "A" students are prepared for class.
They always read the assignment. Their attention to detail is such that
they occasionally can elaborate on class examples.
- CURIOSITY: "A" students demonstrate interest in the
class and the subject. They look up or dig out what they don't understand.
They often ask interesting questions or make thoughtful comments.
- RETENTION: "A" students have retentive minds and practice
making retentive connections. They are able to connect past learning with
the present. They bring a background of knowledge with them to their classes.
They focus on learning concepts rather than memorizing details.
- ATTITUDE: "A" students have a winning attitude. They
have both the determination and the self-discipline necessary for success.
They show initiative. They do things they have not been told to do.
- TALENT: "A" students demonstrate a special talent.
It may be exceptional intelligence and insight. It may be unusual creativity,
organizational skills, commitment - or a some combination. These gifts
are evident to the teacher and usually to the other students as well.
- EFFORT: "A" students match their effort to the demands
of an assignment.
- COMMUNICATIONS: "A" students place a high priority
on writing and speaking in a manner that conveys clarity and thoughtful
organization. Attention is paid to conciseness and completeness.
- RESULTS: "A" students make high grades on tests -
usually the highest in the class. Their work is a pleasure to grade.
The "C" Student - An Average Student
- ATTENDANCE: "C" students are often late and miss class
frequently. They put other priorities ahead of academic work. In some cases,
their health or constant fatigue renders them physically unable to keep
up with the demands of high-level performance.
- PREPARATION: "C" students may prepare their assignments
consistently, but often in a perfunctory manner. Their work may be sloppy
or careless. At times, it is incomplete or late.
- CURIOSITY: "C" students seldom explore topics deeper
than their face value. They lack vision and bypass interconnectedness of
concepts. Immediate relevancy is often their singular test for involvement.
- RETENTION: "C" students retain less information and
for shorter periods. Less effort seems to go toward organizing and associating
learned information with previously acquired knowledge. They display short-term
retention by relying on cramming sessions that focus on details, not concepts.
- ATTITUDE: "C" students are not visibly committed to
class. They participate without enthusiasm. Their body language often expresses
boredom.
- TALENT: "C" students vary enormously in talent. Some
have exceptional ability but show undeniable signs of poor self-management
or bad attitudes. Others are diligent but simply average in academic ability.
- EFFORT: "C" students are capable of sufficient effort,
but either fail to realistically evaluate the effort needed to accomplish
a task successfully, or lack the desire to meet the challenge.
- COMMUNICATIONS: "C" students communicate in ways that
often limit comprehension or risk misinterpretation. Ideas are not well
formulated before they are expressed. Poor listening/reading habits inhibit
matching inquiry and response.
- RESULTS: "C" students obtain mediocre or inconsistent
results on tests. They have some concept of what is going on but clearly
have not mastered the material.
Source: The Teaching Professor. Paraphrased from John H. Williams,
Clarifying Grade Expectations, August/September, 1993 and Paul Solomon
and Annette Nellon, Communicating About the Behavioral Dimensions of Grades,
February, 1996.
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