Login  
Forgot Password?

Welcome to the Studentawards Forum!

The Studentawards Forum is a virtual community where students, educators, and parents gather to share their knowledge, insights, issues, and ideas.

Feel free to take a look around and jump in on the conversation.  If you’re new to this website, you will have to SIGN UP to submit a post.

Questions? Our Forum FAQ and Forum Rules can help. 

Happy Postings!

2 Pages 12>
What's your trick to a high GPA in university? Options
BrunoMars
#1 Posted : Saturday, February 18, 2012 11:13:40 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 9/3/2011
Posts: 119
I've talked to a few upper year mates and they're all saying that people exaggerate university as a dreaded nightmare. Apparntly, I will have A LOT more time to work on the INCREASED work load, therefore things should balance out if I work and not put things to the site and party 24/7 (did I mention I'm not a party freak? A bit of a phobia if you may say so).

So now I want to know, what are your techniques?
Could be anything, for example, getting previous year tests and exams (which apparntly don't change much because the profs are lazy), or studying all day and night long.

Also, how do you take notes? Do you type? Write? Record lectures?

Please share because GPA is my top concern!
ktel
#2 Posted : Saturday, February 18, 2012 11:31:37 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 6/3/2011
Posts: 2,118
Getting previous exams is the number one best thing I do to study. Profs are lazy and 9 times out of 10 I will encounter the EXACT type of question that I have already completed. Other than that I think I've just gotten really good at writing tests. I write them quickly and with precision. So for long exams I'm ahead of most of my classmates in time alone.
BrunoMars
#3 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 12:31:28 AM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 9/3/2011
Posts: 119
Yeah that's what I've been told. Only thing is, I'm concerned about where I would possibly get these exams? Are they sold by students? If yes, how will I meet these upper year people?
inthemaking
#4 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 9:01:43 AM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 12/13/2010
Posts: 1,068
Previous exams. Some will be posted by the prof, most of them are passed down from upper years/previous students. I've never bought any because a) it's a waste of $$ and b) you can easily obtain them for free if you have good friends. You don't even personally have to know any upper years..if you have friends that have upper year friends/older siblings who were in the program, then you're golden. Just be nice to your friends and pass on any study hints/past exams that you get your hands on and they'll do the same for you.

By now you should have figured out what type of studying works best for you (ie. review a little bit everyday over a long period vs. cramming). Stick with it and you'll be fine for university as well.

In undergrad I typed some of my notes and wrote some of my notes..depends on what the course is and whether the profs provided lecture slides in advance. I prefer typing though, it's definitely faster and then it doesn't matter if the prof doesn't post the slides until literally 5 mins before class. Also saves a lot of paper and ink (you'll go through a lot otherwise).
McMaster Bachelor of Health Sciences 2011
U of Guelph-OVC Doctor of Veterinary Medicine 2015
ktel
#5 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 10:18:27 AM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 6/3/2011
Posts: 2,118
BrunoMars wrote:
Yeah that's what I've been told. Only thing is, I'm concerned about where I would possibly get these exams? Are they sold by students? If yes, how will I meet these upper year people?


At my undergrad the SU ran an exam registry that had past exams. Made it fair for everyone.

Now that I'm in grad school I'm definitely seeing how unfair it can be. Some of the other research groups are much freer in providing past exams and homework help than mine. I'm adjusting by making friends, as inthemaking suggests.

I always handwrite all my notes: too many diagrams and equations.
BrunoMars
#6 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 11:28:21 AM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 9/3/2011
Posts: 119
Inthemaking:

The ones that the prof posts, would they end up being different than the one on the test/exam? Or like Ktel said, they are often the same?

And I guess I'll try to make a lot of friends to be on the safe side (which I wasn't planning on doing - was planning on being isolated and independent to avoid distractions).

As far as studying, cramming didn't work. So now I'm giving "review everyday" a shot.

Ktel:

Where was your undergrad?
And nice you're in grad hunh? Whay program and uni?
How was your GPA when graduating?

As far as notes go, I also prefer to hand write, diagrams and equations may look neat on the computer, but are very difficult to draw using MS Paint or microsoft word.
ktel
#7 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 12:46:49 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 6/3/2011
Posts: 2,118
Just because the prof posts past exams doesn't mean he necessarily changes the exam questions or format a lot. I have often seen similar questions on the actual exam even when the prof gives us past exams.

Your plan to not make friends to avoid distractions is really really stupid in my opinion. I wouldn't have made it through my undergrad as easily as I did without the group of friends I had in my program. When you have 4 assignments due on one day you don't really have time to spend on a question you don't know. I always knew I could show up the day the assignment was due and count on one of my friends to know how to do that question and help me answer it. I did the same for them.

I don't cram but I don't review every day either. At the beginning of my undergrad I probably gave myself 2 weeks to study. Now I give myself a week.

My undergrad was at the U of A, I graduated with a 3.9 cGPA in Mechanical Engineering. I'm doing an MASc at U of T in Aerospace now.
BrunoMars
#8 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 1:52:33 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 9/3/2011
Posts: 119
Oh hmm, I would assume that if the prof posts past exams, he would leave it as practice, but hey, if he/she won't change it, GREAT!

My plan to avoid people originally started a few months ago. I left a group of friends because they were a waste of time. They were too "gangster" and "cool" for school. I more or less left them and avoided them for the sake of not being like them. I ended up becoming friends with the "nerds" - who actually happen to be quite friendly people and not as they are depicted. Interestingly, their "nerd" jokes are hilarious (i.e people who take organic chemistry have ALKYNES of troubles), and quite educational, and if I do say so, this crowd is a lot better than the one I had been with for all my life. Lesson learned. But I guess you're right, it's not good to be completely isolated - I'll keep your advice in mind.

Also, do you recommend living on residence? I'm hoping for Brock or Guelph (maybe if you've read my older posts, I'm contemplating on whether to go to a less prestigious university - hence the GPA questions), and I'm not too sure of the calibre of difficulty at these schools. I've had numerous people recommend going to a less prestigious university, for the sake of less competition and a higher GPA, to have more fun and time for ECS - especially because medical schools don't care about your undergrad degree (unless you and another person had the exact same qualifications). Would you agree? Oh yeah btw, how many classes do you have per day? Is it one? Like my friend said he has one class per day, but it's a 3-4 hour lecture, and there is quite a bit of homework, but you also have quite a bit of time to do it - things SHOULD balance out. Also, would you recommend taking some easier courses along the way? I took biomedical sciences, but I was wondering if I should go into a bit of a easier course, such as drama?

And by reviewing everyday, I just read my notes over once a day.

Your undergrad mark is making me jealosu lol. I really wanna get into medicine at UofT SG, UBC, or McGill, but of course, anything less than a 3.8 is --> :( .
caveman
#9 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 2:06:24 PM
Rank: Valedictorian


Joined: 5/27/2011
Posts: 567
BrunoMars wrote:
Oh hmm, I would assume that if the prof posts past exams, he would leave it as practice, but hey, if he/she won't change it, GREAT!

It's not as if you're going to go and write the exact same exam. Usually what happens is you do the same type of question, just with different numbers and stuff. Often the profs follow the exact same format too, so when you do some practice ones you know how the timing should go and where all the marks lie, what you're good at, etc. Sometimes you may end up seeing the exact same question.
ktel
#10 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 2:18:46 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 6/3/2011
Posts: 2,118
BrunoMars wrote:
Also, do you recommend living on residence? I'm hoping for Brock or Guelph (maybe if you've read my older posts, I'm contemplating on whether to go to a less prestigious university - hence the GPA questions), and I'm not too sure of the calibre of difficulty at these schools. I've had numerous people recommend going to a less prestigious university, for the sake of less competition and a higher GPA, to have more fun and time for ECS - especially because medical schools don't care about your undergrad degree (unless you and another person had the exact same qualifications). Would you agree? Oh yeah btw, how many classes do you have per day? Is it one? Like my friend said he has one class per day, but it's a 3-4 hour lecture, and there is quite a bit of homework, but you also have quite a bit of time to do it - things SHOULD balance out. Also, would you recommend taking some easier courses along the way? I took biomedical sciences, but I was wondering if I should go into a bit of a easier course, such as drama?


I didn't live in residence, but that's only because I went to university in my home town. I saved a lot of money by living at home. I don't think there's anything wrong with living in residence. I'm pretty sure I really wouldn't have liked Lister (the main residence at U of A) so it's probably good I didn't stay there. I like to have my own private space and drinking all the time isn't my favorite thing to do. There are plenty of residences out there that aren't like that though.

I went to a fairly 'prestigious' university and I didn't think it was that competitive or difficult. Go wherever you like. It really won't matter to anyone else but you.

The number of classes per day depends on the way the university does it. My university did 1 hour lectures MWF and 1.5 hour lectures Tu/Th. I probably usually had at least 3 classes or labs a day, about 30 hours of class a week I think. Now I only have 2-4 hours of class a week, but grad school doesn't require as many classes. You typically have loads of free time every day, so yes it should balance out if you are good with your time.

Take easy courses or courses you're interested in, absolutely. Make sure they're useful to you and what you want to do.
Xiaohaha
#11 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 2:22:13 PM
Rank: Student Council


Joined: 12/21/2010
Posts: 326
There's no trick. You just have to be good at writing tests. Either know your stuff, or have a good intuition and be good at guessing.
BrunoMars
#12 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 3:36:44 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 9/3/2011
Posts: 119
Cavemen:
Then I guess tests should be pretty easy hunh? Which university are you from?

Ktel:
If you were in my position of deciding on a university, where would you go:
UWO - Biological and Biomedical Sciences
UofT SG - Life Science
UofGuelph - Biomedical Sciences
Brock U - Biomedical Sciences
York U - Biomedical Sciences ( I HATE THIS UNIVERSITY )
uOttawa - Biomedical Sciences

The quality of education is the same, meaning I will learn 2+2 no matter where I go, but where would you say is getting a high GPA easier?

I was thinking of taking drama because I like it, and I find it simple.
Plus I had a high mark in high school drama so... Yeah :P

Xiaohaha:
I suppose.
inthemaking
#13 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 4:39:27 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 12/13/2010
Posts: 1,068
BrunoMars wrote:
Inthemaking:

The ones that the prof posts, would they end up being different than the one on the test/exam? Or like Ktel said, they are often the same?


Obviously not all of them will be identical, but some of them are sometimes the exact same, some have minor changes (eg. if the question was asking which of the following are true, now it asks which is false; the order of the MC answers are switched around etc), and some are completely different. Either way, they give you a good idea of what the prof has asked for in the past and if you do enough of them you'll start to notice a trend and realize what topics they focus most heavily on.
McMaster Bachelor of Health Sciences 2011
U of Guelph-OVC Doctor of Veterinary Medicine 2015
ktel
#14 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 5:33:33 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 6/3/2011
Posts: 2,118
BrunoMars wrote:
Ktel:
If you were in my position of deciding on a university, where would you go:
UWO - Biological and Biomedical Sciences
UofT SG - Life Science
UofGuelph - Biomedical Sciences
Brock U - Biomedical Sciences
York U - Biomedical Sciences ( I HATE THIS UNIVERSITY )
uOttawa - Biomedical Sciences


I haven't attended any of those universities and really don't know anything about them. I would form my own opinion instead of asking people on a forum.
mynameismattgotmlgo
#15 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 7:36:56 PM
Rank: Student Body President


Joined: 12/22/2010
Posts: 1,330
Practice exams are definitely helpful for quantitative courses like math, physics, engineering, and chemistry, but I don't think they're that helpful for more qualitative courses like biology and psychology. My bio profs especially loved to change a question ever so slightly, most likely just to throw off the people who relied heavily on past exams, and it definitely worked. e.g. A previous exam question might read, "the CCK3 ion channel exhibits the following properties... 1), 2), 3), and 4)", and let's say 1 and 3 are correct. You might get to a question on your exam that reads, "the CCK4 ion channel exhibits the following properties... 1), 2), 3), and 4)", with the same choices as provided in the previous exam. If you don't know the material that well, or know it well but get psyched out, then you might think, "oh, I remember this from the previous exam; the correct answer is '1 and 3 are correct'." Nope. 1 and 3 were correct for the CCK3 channel, but '4 only' is the correct choice for the CCK4 channel question. Even if you know the material well, this can throw you off and really make you question how well you remember what you studied and/or how well you remember the correct answers on previous exams. Given that you're probably in a hurry, stressed out, possibly sleep deprived, last studied that material a few days ago, did a few practice exams yesterday, etc..., it is quite easy to just jump straight to the answer without even noticing that this time the question was about CCK4, not CCK3 channels.
BMSc Honours Specialization in Medical Science, Minor in Psychology, UWO '09
Bachelor of Pharmacy, University of Alberta '13 - Drop out as of '11
University Certificate in Finance, Athabasca University '12
Petroleum Engineering Technology diploma, NAIT '13
AgriGen
#16 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 8:39:35 PM
Rank: Senior Student


Joined: 3/14/2011
Posts: 132
1. Your biggest obstacle will be motivation. Creating consistent motivation for 4 years is hard. If you could know one thing about a person in order to predict their relative grades... it would be motivation. Make sure you do something that you enjoy intrinsically or your probably going to burn out.

2. You say you have a phobia about partying (im not sure to what degree). I would try and fix that. Doesn't mean you have to enjoy partying, but learn to at least be comfortable with it. School is a social thing; the more meaningful connections you have with people the easier you life will be. This becomes really important if you move on to a professional school or work (especially office environments).
caveman
#17 Posted : Sunday, February 19, 2012 8:57:35 PM
Rank: Valedictorian


Joined: 5/27/2011
Posts: 567
BrunoMars wrote:
Cavemen:
Then I guess tests should be pretty easy hunh? Which university are you from?

Not necessarily. MC exams, from my experience, aren't something you can rely on past exams for, since there's so many different questions they can throw on there from an exam bank and they can change the question ever so slightly and it's completely different (see one of matt's examples).

Some classes don't have past exams, so you're not sure what to expect.

For the ones that do have past exams, it's often quite helpful, but if one of the questions is a big, 10-mark explaining question, you have to know the material to get it write. 99% of the time there are different questions for stuff like that from one year to the next (again, from my experience).

There is also probably a difference between how much past exams help for each discipline- bio past exams may be more similar to actual exams than anthropology past exams (I'm just making stuff up).

I go to Waterloo.
JayThibs
#18 Posted : Tuesday, February 21, 2012 2:48:10 PM
Rank: Frosh


Joined: 12/2/2011
Posts: 3
I used to follow something similar to this, but I decided to switch to physics so my method is a bit different now. But still very similar to this (also, I did not write this, but I did something similar even before I had read this):

Study Method Part I: What it takes to be an Excellent Student:

In a very basic sense, we all learn the same. We must understand the material and then see it over and over again. In undergraduate, because of the low volume of learning, a person can get away with all sorts of weaknesses. However, the best students will often not have to alter their study methods at all for medical school.

To be a good student, the intangibles are required: work-ethic, dedication, and self-confidence. However, in medical school, you will discover that almost everyone has that. The filtering process of undergraduate has removed most of those that lacked these intangibles.

At this point it comes down to study method. The students who have the best methods are called geniuses. The students who have the worst methods flunk out or barely pass.

Get this in your mind and keep it there: It is the study method that makes the good student!!!

Now, one last important point, it is most important that one realizes that every good study method comes down to just a few things. You must understand the material by translating it in your own language. You must then review the material over and over again. You need to see the material at least 4 times with an optimum of at least 6 times. And finally, you need to review over several days. That is the best way to do it. When methods have these simple points in them, they are good methods.

Study Method Part II: 3 Most Common Mistakes by Medical Students:

Please note: premed students make many of the same mistakes..

1st NO NO: Don’t oversimplify the material..

I’ve now had the chance to watch many students flunk out. Every single one of them gave the same response. “Well, the material was easy to understand. It’s just the volume of information.” Wrong, Wrong, Wrong… The few times that I spoke to a student about this, I would ask them questions about the material that they understood. Again and again, I would notice a superficial memorization process in their answers. This is why they were overwhelmed on the questions. Medical school and USMLE test questions are conceptual. You don’t get that many memorization gimmies. You need to understand the material and manipulate it in your mind. Understanding the material is not easy. It takes effort, but it is a rewarding endeavor.

2nd NO NO: Don‘t just read and reread the material. You must take your own notes..

I’ve seen this countless times. In almost every case the student who did this was failing. A good student takes their own notes and transcribes things into their own words. This is critical because you are translating the notes into a language that you understand. Students who don’t do this will end up failing. This is basic study strategy and it must be done.

3rd NO NO: Don’t start to review the material on the day before the test.

Student who are doing bad are often as tired as they can be. They stay up all night before the test slaving. They put in incredible 18 and 19 hour study days on the day before a test.. Yet they still do bad. You have to understand that the mind is a muscle in many ways. You can’t work it for 18 hours straight. Review needs to start well-before the day before the test. Give those concepts time to become entrenched within your mind. In undergraduate, you can get away with not doing this. In medical school, it’s a very bad idea. Remember, medical school is like the pros. You need to be better. A good method has review built into it, such as the method that I will present.

Finally, here is an overview of one study method that will work in medical school. Enjoy. Let’s begin. This method will address every defiency that medical students make.

1st: You must preview a lecture. You can count this as the first time that you seen the material. Go here for how to preview a lecture:

Before every lecture, I preview the material. Now, I should explain where most medical students go wrong -- where I went wrong. Previewing the material SHOULD not involve reading it for 2 hours! That is LEARNING the material.

Previewing involves creating a roadmap in your head. You need to develop a feel for where the lecture is going. This will remarkably increase comprehension. There are two methods for doing this:

How to Preview a Method

Method 1: 8 Sentence Process-Oriented Method

Look over the lecture. Write 8 general sentences explaining the lecture. The 8 sentences need to relate as a process. Make sure that you leave plenty of space between each point. The goal is to come back and fill in the details under those 8 points. Always be aware that the main point of this is to create a roadmap in your head. You need to have a feel for where the lecture is going. Within time, you will be able to do this in a few minutes. Please remember that you don’t need to learn the lecture during the preview phase! You just need to develop a feel for where it is going.

Method 2: 8 Sentence Question-Oriented Method

Look over the lecture. Write 8 general questions that you have about the lecture. The 8 questions need to cover multiple aspects of the lecture. Make sure that you leave plenty of space between each question. The goal is to come back and fill in the answers under those questions. Again, be aware that the main point of this is to create a roadmap in your head. You need to have a feel for where the lecture is going. Within time, you will be able to preview within a few minutes. Please remember that you don’t need to learn the lecture during the preview phase! You just need to develop a feel for where it is going.

Now, let’s do a brief tab. So far, you have seen the material one time for preview. You only went over it for a few minutes, but those were an essential few minutes as you will now come to see.

Getting Something Out of Lecture: the Actual Lecture Itself:

This part is relatively simple if you engaged in the previewing method.

You need to bring your 8 or 10 sentence list to class. As the professor lectures, check each point that you feel the professor has covered as the professor lectures over it. You may still take notes on another sheet of paper. But use the "checklist." It takes two seconds to check a sentence. Whenever the professor has not touched something, put a question mark by it.

Use the question mark if you don't understand something also. Write it down and then put a question mark by it.

IMPORTANT: it is extremely important that you put a question mark by anything that you don't understand and IMMEDIATELY see the professor about it!

Now, after class is over or during class, ask questions about everything that you don't understand. Don't be embarassed. Just tell the professor that you didn't understand it.

Derivation 2: Write down each point that you don’t understand on a separate sheet of paper. Go see the Professor about it.

Now, there is a Part II to getting something out of lecture. If the professor initally explains something and you still don't understand it go to the professor‘s office hours. Ask the professor to explain it again while politely telling him or her that you didn't get it. If you still don't understand it, ask the professor again -- but this time try to be more specific in determining what aspect of the professors explanation is causing problems.

If you don't understand it for a third time, go home.. pull out a book. Read it. Come back the next day and ask the professor to explain it again. You will most likely get it.

It is important to understand that you can still do well in medical school without going to lecture. It’s just that you will have to study a lot longer and harder than if you learn how to retain information from lecture. It’s advantageous to use a proven method, such as this one, that will help you utilize things like lectures.

IMPORTANT OPTIONAL DERIVATION: Many learning psyschologist maintain that you should do an additional step. You should take 10-15 minutes immediately after the lecture to re-read the material. I will personally do this, but it is optional. Supposedly, studies have shown that it greatly increases comprehension.

Time for a Tally. You have seen the material one time for Preview. You have also seen the information 1 time in lecture. That is two times. If you do the Optional Derivation, then you have seen the material 3 times! But lets assume that you don’t do the optional derivation. You’re at two times right now. It’s time to learn how to cover a lecture..

Covering the Material:

Now, we enter the next stage of learning.

This should be the third time that you see the material within 24 hours (possibly fourth)! When you finish covering the lecture, you should have everything entered into memory, save a concept or two that you will need to ask the professor about for clarification.

You must learn to become a transcriber. This means that you must get used to transcribing the notes or books that you have been reading into your own, concise words.

This needs to be in an organized format. Something that naturally flows within your own mental construct. What’s important is that you learn to word your notes in a clear, concise fashion.

Second, and this is extremely, extremely, extremely important. You must diagram. Now, you might find yourself copying diagrams and pathways. That’s okay. You need to do that. But challenge yourself to try and create your own diagrams and drawings also.

The process of learning and memory works like this. Learning something is a skill.. That is, you understand something as a process and you are able to master the process within your mind. Afterwards, you form logical representations within your mind of various relationships. This is what enters the information into long-term memory.

You’re a thinker suddenly. Your thinking through your information as you study it. You’re finding relationships, and it enters memory. That is the whole key to learning! You have to form relationships.

Think about this.. What is a mnemonic.. A mnemonic is simply a relationship that links words to a simple concept. In essence, you are forming a primitive relationship of the scientific material so that it enters memory. Now, imagine the power of forming your own relationships. You will remember things longer and faster.

Train yourself how to think through material. Many medical students never master that and they pass. But they never become excellent at mastering the scientific material. You can, but you have to work hard to learn how to do this..

Now, I can explain why the diagram and drawing is so important. The diagram that you make represents interconnecting relationships that you have made yourself. At least that is the case when you make your own diagrams. Use drawings, use boxes, use learning trees ect.. Try to understand the process.

Challenge yourself to make at least 5 diagrams per a lecture at the beginning. After that, you will naturally find how many you need for the information to enter memory.

Finally, make sure that you understand everything. If there is word that you don’t know know, look it up! If there is something that you don’t understand, ask for help. You need to understand these concepts to form relationships.

IMPORTANT!!! There is a common question that should be addressed. People often ask how to diagram and how they should ask their questions. That is a very good question, and it is easy to answer. The best way to learn how to word your own notes is to look at the professor’s lectures. Take a look. You will notice plenty of diagrams along with concise, interconnecting points.

When you get done with covering the material, your information should look like a lecture that you prepared. Imagine yourself getting ready to present it in front of the class. Imagine having to answer questions about the material. That’s the key to covering this stuff.

After you finish going through all the trouble to make your own notes, make sure that you organize them in a folder. You will use these for the review process.

It is time to take a Tally. You have now seen the material 3 times (4 times if you do the optional way). You know it (mostly).

Now, it is essential that you review like a madman or manwoman. This is where the difference between a high-pass and honors student takes place.

The Review Phase

If you don’t remember anything else, remember this: The Review Phase Must Happen Over Time!!!!!!!!!! Let me say it again. The Review Phase Must Happen Over Time!!!!! The best method of review is to do it over time, not all in one day.

Review 1: This occurs the day after lecture. Spend no more than 10-15 minutes reviewing a particular subject each day. But there is an art to reviewing also. Most students make the often repeated mistake that I used to make. They simply scan over the material and call it review.. Hell NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

This is how you review. Read over your previous notes – the ones you made the day before. You’ll be able to do this in about 5 to 10 minutes after you get a little bit of practice.

However, while doing this, you will need to do something else. You will need to do something that I haven’t seen mentioned anywhere else on the web. You need to challenge yourself to add at least 5 sentences to your notes.

Now, in these 5 sentences, you should be able to link concepts to something else. Write down the relationship in a brief sentence. You will become so good at this that you will be able to do this in 10 minutes.. It is essential that you link your notes to existing concepts within your mind. This is how things stay in long-term memory.

It’s time for the second review.

2nd review: Now, you need to see the material a 5th time. This time spend 5 minutes skimming over the lecture – mainly looking at the major points of your concise, diagrammed, lecture notes. Try to add at least 2 sentences to it. It should take no more than 5 minutes.

At this point, you are done with the material for one day.. So, let’s recap really quickly.

In review, you spent 10-15 minutes going over the previous days lecture. You added 5 sentences to your previous notes linking them to existing concepts within your mind. During the other 5 minutes (you need to spend 20 minutes reviewing), you went over the material that you reviewed before – adding 2 sentences to it. Once again, you are linking it to an existing concept within your mind. Concept building is the key to learning.

Okay, so by now.. You’ve seen the material 5 times in 72 hours!! You’re probably saying enough already.. But it is not over yet.

6th review: During the weekend, you must do a master review. You need to re-read over all the material that you were given. You can skim through it, but you need to go over it for around 2 and a half hours. And guess what.. You need to add more sentences. Try to add 5 to 10 sentences over the entire week of information. This will be the 6th time that you see the information.

In fact, spend every weekend reviewing the material for that entire unit!! So, that you never forget it.

7th review: Finally, let’s fastfoward. The day before the test. Spend 4 or 5 hours reading through all of your concise notes and sentences that you added. You’re ready to make close to a 100% on the test. Reread through the original lecture notes also.

One special note.. You will realize that you will see the material multiple, multiple, multiple times. But each time that you see it, you add something to it. In essence, you never get behind.

Now, I once had a question that you may have right now. I realized that you would see the material several times for older information. But what about the new information. Remember, that by the third time that you see the material, you should know everything. So, it will be fresh in your mind by test time. Plus, you do a master review on the day before the test. So, you will see everything at least 4 times. Most things, however, you will see at least 7 times!

Think about it.. By 7 times, you will probably be sick of the material!!!

In Summary,

Oh, what I would have given for someone to have given this to me before medical school. Please remember that there are a variety of different methods that will work in medical school, but the best methods are the same. They all involve understanding the material and reviewing it like crazy. Seeing the information multiple times is the key.

As an afternote, I am including two other methods that I have seen successful students use. I want to emphasize that the method that I gave is very good. It’s turned many poor students into top students. It’s turned good students into better students. But, it’s good to see other methods. Notice one common thing. All of the good methods involve the same basic principle. You must understand the material and then see it over and over again.



I'll be adding more info later, but for now, I think that this is enough.

EDIT 1: I read a great article on this subject:

http://artofmanliness.co...sful-gentleman-scholar/

I adore this site, they have a lot of useful information for men (and women!)
31507486
#19 Posted : Wednesday, February 22, 2012 8:35:49 PM
Rank: Frosh


Joined: 8/9/2011
Posts: 2
Study and pay attention. It'll be difficult at first, but once you develop a routine, it's hard to get out of it.
aimango
#20 Posted : Thursday, February 23, 2012 12:11:16 AM
Rank: Student Council


Joined: 1/28/2011
Posts: 487
BrunoMars wrote:
I've talked to a few upper year mates and they're all saying that people exaggerate university as a dreaded nightmare. Apparntly, I will have A LOT more time to work on the INCREASED work load, therefore things should balance out if I work and not put things to the site and party 24/7 (did I mention I'm not a party freak? A bit of a phobia if you may say so).

So now I want to know, what are your techniques?
Could be anything, for example, getting previous year tests and exams (which apparntly don't change much because the profs are lazy), or studying all day and night long.
This is not the case for physics profs.. they LET you see past MTs and Finals, and make your MT and final twice as difficult.
Also, how do you take notes? Do you type? Write? Record lectures?
i used to always write them, but it became necessary to type notes for profs that expand on their board notes through talking. sometimes board notes suck and make little sense to me, and it helps to write down extra. i type faster, though.
Please share because GPA is my top concern!


my top tip is just keeping up with the material, actually paying attention in class, and asking questions when you dont understand (before it's too late!)
UW Software Engineering 2015
Check out my blog, where I talk about school, coop terms, and other random stuff :)
2 Pages 12>
Forum Jump  

Powered by YAF | YAF © 2003-2013, Yet Another Forum.NET
Copyright © 2003-2013 Yet Another Forum.net. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1998-2013 studentawards.com & boursetudes.com - Studentawards Inc. All rights reserved.