Lon’s 7 study hacks!

Hi!

So, I ambitiously started writing this blog post a week before leaving the U.S. for South Africa. Little did I know that packing up my life to move back home would be such a draining emotional rollercoaster, followed by two weeks of painful jetlag once I arrived home. BUT, I had to get myself out of that rut of exhaustion and get writing because how could I miss out on such an important topic?

This week’s post is all about the study tips I found most helpful during my undergrad, and, particularly, during my honours year. I feel like that Honours was the period in which I was in my stride and was able to remain consistent throughout the academic year. June marks the midway point of the South African academic year, and I have found that the June/July holidays are an excellent time to recalibrate and remind yourself why you started this educational journey. Many of us might be in a slump, with much of the motivation we all had at the beginning of the year diminishing. This is an ideal time to ensure we revive the spirit of consistency. Half of my recommendations are relevant to undergraduate and Honours students, but I believe that a few adjustments here and there should ensure applicability to any setting that requires productivity, so keep reading. Let’s get to it.

1. Find what works best for you

One of my most vital pieces of advice is to give yourself the time and grace to try different ways of effective studying and choose what feels most natural. I have gone through my fair share of trial and error with various study methods. Trying different techniques and strategies taught me a lot about my working habits and how to optimise my life. Additionally, I began paying attention to my personality and behavioural traits, intrinsic and extrinsic motivations, to figure out what works best for me. As an example to shed some light on why this is key, I began sitting in the front row during lectures because it allowed me to participate in class without feeling too self-conscious. After all, I felt like I was having a more direct conversation with the lecturer. Over and above that, I felt obligated to always have my work done by regularly participating in class because now the lecturers knew me. All this played perfectly into my personality and need for accountability.

2. Eat your breakfast

This tip is one that I can’t take much credit for because it is something my dad would repeat time and time again. Now I say this as someone who is not much of a breakfast person, but the brain uses up so much of our energy. So, once I began prioritising a bowl of oats in the morning, I started noticing that it would give me just enough energy to get through the first half of the day.

3. Schedule everything

Every hat you wear deserves its own proportion of your time, and writing down everything you need to get done keeps you on track with your time management. Many productivity YouTubers have coined this method as time blocking. I schedule everything down to my naps and replying to emails. I also limit the time allocated towards each task per Parkinson’s law which states that ‘work will expand to fill the time allotted for its completion.’ To keep track of this, I use the Pomodoro technique, which encourages you to work with the time you are given through a time management app based on 25-minute stretches of focused work broken by five-minute breaks.

4. Note-taking

Weekdays were usually too packed and busy to consolidate my lecture notes. Therefore, I would use Saturday mornings to finalise my summaries. In taking notes, I would colour code my notes according to each module, primarily because I am a visual person. This was very helpful because my brain would associate a particular colour with that module, making memorisation more effective.

5. Have a study spot

A space associated with study and work, particularly at home, is a good strategy. This helps condition your brain to know that work needs to be done once you move into that space. I tend to have stricter rules regarding my study space, such as not eating and not having my phone once I sit down to maintain my brain’s association with that area.

Two notes about this: 1) While using the Pomodoro technique, once my 25 minutes of work are done, I get up, grab my phone and sit elsewhere during my 5-minute break. 2) Similarly, when I have to eat, I get up from that area, sit elsewhere in the house and eat. When I still lived in a student residence, I would get up from my desk and sit on my bed.

6. Create a reward system

An academic term or semester is too long to expect your brain to remain motivated until the release of your final grades. So, creating a reward system towards the small wins helps maintain motivation. Moreover, it is essential to prioritise the need to fuel, recharge, and nourish your well-being as a human. Therefore, I would incorporate the two by using any fuel source as a reward. For example, at the end of each day, once my tasks are completed, I would meet up with a friend, walk, catch up on some YouTube content, go shopping, or whatever I felt like. The key is understanding what a day-to-day reward is like for you tangibly.

7. Weekly accountability check-in

I typically do this on Sunday evening, checking whether I have met my weekly goals and tasks. This is an excellent time to reflect, take stock of what has happened during the past week, and set a new plan and related tasks for the week. Achieving such functions during the week adds to the bigger goals you are working towards. This has been a great way of keeping me accountable and in alignment with my goals for the year.

To be honest, once my studies became research-centric, I struggled to integrate some of these study hacks, but as mentioned in tip no.1, you have to keep trying new methods and strategies and incorporate different habits into your routine to find what works best for you. Do that and cultivate consistency by practising how to ‘make yourself do what you should do when you should do it whether you feel like it or not’, and you will be well on your way. All the best!

How to Study like a Genius and Ensure You’ll Get Full Marks on Every Test You Take

Exam season is almost upon us, and the campus air is filled with tension and panic. Students cower in libraries and empty lecture rooms, attempting to prepare themselves for the end of block, and the harrowing start of the June exams. The weather grows cold, the people grow fearful, and, as always, I show up to save the day! As someone who hasn’t written a test in two years – and who hasn’t written an ­in-person test in four years – I am clearly the perfect candidate to prepare you for these trying times, and to equip you with some great studying tips, dear reader! I am the greatest student to ever live, after all…

Stress is a great motivator, but it can also be a great hindrance. I want you to walk into your exam confident and calm, and the most important skill you will need to achieve this is good time management­. I know how overwhelming it can feel considering how much content you need to cover before an exam. Just thinking about it can freak you out and send you into a spiral, making it difficult to even start working. That’s why good time management is everything. Assess how much work you need to get through, how much time you have to get through it all, and then create a study timetable that will allow you to work through everything while allowing yourself ample time to rest and recover. I am a huge advocate for sleeping, and I refuse to let anything encroach on my beauty sleep – that’s why I look so young and vibrant despite being well into my early twenties.

It is critical not to overwork yourself, because that will only make it harder to study and to retain the information you study. Don’t work hard, work consistently. Creating a study timetable – and sticking to it – will ensure that you’re not up the night before an exam, desperately hoping you can skip an entire section of work that probably won’t be in the exam anyway*. There is no shortage of great apps designed specifically to help you create a detailed study timetable, so there’s really no excuse not to do it!

* Cramming is a wonderful way to increase your stress levels, and decrease your ability to retain information. I highly recommend cramming if you love procrastinating and hate passing your exams. Check with a trusted medical professional before trying cramming. Side effects may include mental exhaustion, poor marks, and a deep sense of regret.

Once you’ve created a comprehensive study timetable, you need to create a good study environment. Clear your cluttered desk, throw your phone into the nearest body of water you can find, and grab some good old-fashioned pens and paper, because we’re about to get knee-deep in note-taking! I prefer to work without music – especially music with lyrics – but if you find yourself in a noisy environment that you can’t escape, I recommend listening to the work of Ludovico Einuadi. His instrumentals are mostly piano based, and I find it very calming and easy to tune out while working. Except for the times when he shreds on the piano – avoid the songs where he goes absolutely wild on the keys, because while it’s exhilarating, it’s not conducive to working. With regards to how I work, my studying involves writing a lot of notes. I like to ease into the work by simply going through lecture slides, readings, and textbooks, reading aloud and highlighting key points, ensuring that I have a good understanding of the content. If there’s anything that confuses me, I’ll dig deeper into that topic and ensure it makes sense to me before I move on. After this, I begin taking notes, creating mind maps, and actively engaging with the content. I have developed my own personal shorthand which makes my notes incomprehensible to anyone who isn’t me, but it saves me so much time when writing and revising my work. It’s good to start off by writing comprehensive notes, and then having the notes become less detailed as you revise them and rewrite them. Flashcards with key terms are a great way to keep information fresh in your mind and to quiz yourself on the work you’ve covered.

Finally, I want to let you know about a friend you should never neglect. That friend, of course, is past papers. Ignore the questionable grammar in that sentence, and focus on the sentiment. It’s not enough to just remember study content – you need to know how to apply your knowledge to answer a question. Past papers give you an idea of how you’ll need to utilise the content you’ve studied, how questions will be phrased, and how answers should be structured. Working through past papers is a great way to not only revise your work, but to refine your exam taking abilities. They’re also a window into the twisted minds of the people who create your exams. Know your enemy, dear reader!

Now, go find the nearest body of water to throw your phone into, and get studying, dear reader! I know you’re going to do great!