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Many college students use highlighting as a reading tool. However, despite its popularity, highlighting tends not to be a very effective reading strategy. This handout shares effective reading strategies that you can use instead of or in addition to highlighting and shares tips for highlighting well.
Consider the following tips and strategies as you navigate online, remote classes at MSUM. Adapt these suggestions to best suit how you learn and work optimally.
Do you sometimes struggle to determine what to write down during lectures? Have you ever found yourself wishing you could take better or more effective notes? Whether you are sitting in a lecture hall or watching a lecture online, note-taking in class can be intimidating, but with a few strategic practices, anyone can take clear, effective notes. This handout will discuss the importance of note-taking, qualities of good notes, and tips for becoming a better note-taker.
While digital distractions are certainly not uncommon, they can be harmful to your study habits, breaking your concentration and rendering your reading or studying habits ineffective.
In this handout, we provide information on Bloom’s Taxonomy—a way of thinking about your schoolwork that can change the way you study and learn to better align with how your professors think (and how they grade).
Let’s be honest: we all struggle with distractions to some degree. Distractions can take many forms, including our phones, computers, friends, or our own thoughts. In college, distractions can be even more abundant than in high school, because there are so many new opportunities and experiences available.
This handout will help you prepare and conduct an effective speech or presentations after you have already created a speech or presentation.
First, you’ll want to make sure you’re taking the test that’s required for the program in which you’d like to enroll. The GRE was redesigned a few years ago to expand its relevance to other areas of graduate study. Many business schools now accept either the GMAT or the GRE. Some law schools are beginning to consider the GRE in lieu of the LSAT.
Much of the information you need to know in college classes is given in lectures. One of the main differences between learning from texts and learning from lectures is that in lectures, the professor controls the pace.
It’s likely that you’ll benefit from contacting a professor at least once during your time in college, and talking with your professors can have many concrete benefits: to help you gain clarity on assignments, understand course content, to learn how to study in a particular course, or to build a relationship with your professor.