Student Guide to Success
This student success book is designed to provide students with resources and tutorials to help them be successful in Moodle and other systems used at Coastal Carolina University.
10. How to Effectively Study and Manage Workload
10.1. Tips on How to Effectively Study
Article was written by Teaching Assistant Professors Melissa Ramirez and Claire Gordy from the Department of Biological Sciences. (https://online-distance.ncsu.edu/tips-for-students-to-prepare-for-online-learning/)
We enlisted students to give us their best tips and tricks for success with online course work.
Schedule and Routine
It is imperative to develop a routine for your semester based on your class schedule, work responsibilities, and other activities. Now that you are taking online classes, your schedule is suddenly more flexible. Try not to let time get away from you, though — if possible, try your best to stick to the same class schedule as before, logging into your course website when you would have been in class to watch lectures or do other activities that your instructor has added to replace in-person lecture time. That allows you to save the time you normally used for homework and studying — because you’ll still have to do both of those things.
Take Breaks
When taking online courses, it can be easy to find yourself working or studying for long periods of time and losing focus. Here are some suggestions from your fellow students about ways to build in breaks. (You can read more about why taking breaks is critical for learning here: https://www.onlineschools.org/science-of-study-breaks/)
- Get up and move once every hour. Even if you’re just walking up and down your hallway.
- Build in 5-minute phone breaks. If you have them planned then you’re less likely to get distracted and check your phone in the middle of your work.
- Concentration is key. You can take breaks online whenever you want, try the Pomodoro method to try and stay focused.
Location, Location, Location
Your physical workspace is important — not just in terms of having access to your computer and enough space to take notes — but also in terms of minimizing distractions and creating separate spaces for work, sleep, and other activities. Our students have found this to be true through experience:
- It’s tempting to get cozy and listen to lectures in the comfort of my bed, but it’s important to separate relaxation time from work time. If I set up an area that is devoted to work in my home, I can be much more productive with my time.
- Something I do is intentionally separate my leisure spaces and my productivity spaces. I don’t ever do homework on my couch because I’ll inevitably be less productive.
Setting Goals
It feels great to be able to check something off a to-do list (even when it’s “Make a to-do list)! Setting concrete goals for yourself is a great way to encourage productivity and to break assignments that seem daunting into smaller “chunks”:
- If regimented schedules aren’t your thing, go for daily to-do lists with concrete goals. Examples of good goals are: “Read 5 pages today” (even if the end goal is to have 25 pages read by the next week), “Watch half of the lecture materials”. Avoid time-based goals: You can study or fool around for an hour.
You can also incorporate your goals into a reward system for yourself:
- Create a reward system to make work productive. For instance, tell yourself that you can only check your phone once you have finished 2 paragraphs of the essay. Or, have a snack between assignments. This will keep your focus on the assignment and make you work more efficiently.
(And this kind of reward system also helps you build in breaks!)
Communication
Now that you won’t see your professor and classmates in person, it is critical to make sure you are communicating with them. Your professor can’t see that confused look on everyone’s face and realize that a point needs to be explained in a different way, so you will need to reach out when something doesn’t make sense. One good solution is to first check-in with friends from class, and if you all have the same question, or if you are still confused after a friend explains it to you, contact your professor.
Communication isn’t just about course content, though. We each encounter new and changing barriers that might affect our ability to succeed as students and as instructors. Your instructor can’t possibly anticipate all of the barriers that might arise for their students, so it’s important for you to let them know when you need an extended deadline, when you are unable to access course material, or when you are struggling to stay on top of things because you are caring for family members in addition to trying to finish your classes.