Moore / Murphy | How to be a student | Buch | 978-0-335-22652-8 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch

Moore / Murphy

How to be a student

Buch, Englisch

ISBN: 978-0-335-22652-8
Verlag: Open University Press


This exciting guide is perfect for all students, especially those new to Higher and Further Education.

How to be a student helps tackle the challenges and opportunities associated with life at university and college. 100 actionable ideas, strategies and tactics help you to make the most of your time, including:

- Turning up to your lectures and what to do while you’re there

- Knowing what plagiarism is and learning to develop belief in your own voice

- Making presentations with confidence and style

- Being more creative

- Spotting signs that you need to take a break

- Dealing with boredom

- Preventing small obstacles from becoming big problems

- Not letting money issues get in the way

- Remembering (people thought that) Einstein was a slow learner

- Treating your CV as a working document

And much more!

Drawing from the real experiences of students, this book presents ideas and suggestions that you can use to enhance your time at university and to improve the quality of your learning life.
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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


Contents

Introduction

A. Insights and ideas for when you first arrive

1. Remembering that humans are designed to learn

2. Not letting money issues get in the way

3. Being strict about part-time work

4. Developing study rituals

5. Having a calendar and an appointments diary

6. Preparing to be disillusioned

7. Turning up to your lectures

8. Getting your learning abilities checked

9. Getting help when you need it

10. Preventing small obstacles from becoming big problems

11. Being the first to admit when you don't understand

12. Decorating your study space

13. Buying a dictionary and a thesaurus

14. Organising your study materials and learning resources

15. Regular study snacks are better than occasional study binges

16. Understanding boredom

17. Developing your own personal coding system

18. Phoning home

19. Talking to others about your study tasks

20. Setting better study goals

21. Always having someone know where you are

22. Having a social life that supports your learning

23. Accepting that bureaucracy is just part of life

24. Getting regular exercise

25. Eating wisely

26. Drinking

27. Sleeping enough (but not too much)

28. Breathing properly

29. Posture and positioning

30. Love, friendship and sex

B. Developing your skills and self awareness as a higher education student

31. Understanding the downside of being connected and availble

32. Finding a zone between resignation and anger when you're staring problems in the face

33. Not treating learning as a competition

34. Recording your study habits

35. Remembering that lecturers and tutors are human too

36. Recognizing that information is not knowledge

37. Realizing that students are not customers

38. Spotting the signs that you need to take a break

39. Watching out for study drift

40. Knowing whether you're a natural introvert or a natural extravert and asjusting your study strategies accordingly

41. Understanding and controlling knee-jerk reactions to stress

42. Keeping a learning diary

43. Knowing about clashes in habits, cultures and ways of doing things

44. How you feel impacts on how your learn

45. Remembering that people thought Einstein was a slow learner

46. Benefiting from the fact that students are different from one another

C. Gaining momentum: building confidence and motivation

47. Just doing it

48. Focusing on what you can do now

49. Recognising that deadlines don't have to ruin your life

50. Interrogating your lecturer and tutors

51. Getting to know your librarians and lurking in the library

52. Not being too hard on yourself

53. Not being too easy on yourself

54. Being brave

55. Using all of your brain

56. Being more creative

57. Playing

58. Rewarding and celebrating when things go right

59. Understanding different kinds of reaction to feedback

60. Getting negative feedback

61. Getting positive feedback

62. Choosing the feedback you want

63. Making presentations

64. Not comparing yourself to others

65. Checking rumours before acting on them

66. Playing to your strengths

67. Hoping and persisting

68. Controlling worry

69. Realising that you'll never be able to keep everyone happy

D: Being the best you can be: persistence and enhancement strategies

70. Knowing that it's impossible to be perfect but it's always possible to improve

71. Paying attention to grammar and punctuation

72. Keeping track of your information sources

73. Knowing what plagiarism is

74. Everything should be made as simple as possible but not simpler

75. Learning the beauty of summaries

76. Having some time every day when you're doing nothing at all

77. Organising study retreats

78. Using listening skills to help you learn better

79. Not jumpi


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