Successful
Students
Part
3
7. Successful students
understand that actions affect learning. Successful students know their
personal behavior affect their feelings and emotions that 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 your
disinterested, and you’ll become disinterested. So the next time you have trouble
concentrating in the classroom, “act” like an interested person: learn 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.
8. Successful students
talk about what they’re learning. Successful students get to know something
well enough that they can put into words. Talking about something, with friends
or classmates, is not only good for checking whether or not you know something,
it’s 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.
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