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Writer's pictureRAENA LEARNING

STUDY SKILLS FOR EXCELLENT EXAM RESULTS IN IGCSEs/ A LEVELs/ CHECKPOINTs


Once the shiny, freshness of back to school wears off, students and parents know it’s time to get down to business. Particularly for students heading to Checkpoint or IGCSE/A Levels exams, thehomework assignments become tougher, workloads get heavier and staying ahead of the curve becomes more of a challenge.

As a parent, you may ask, “What is the ‘secret behind the A’?” While having effective study skills may be overlooked on the academic journey, we’ve seen this be the tipping point in making good students into great students. We’ve compiled a list of good study habits for your tween or teen to help set him or her up for a productive school year.The education system historically adds more content and more testing, hoping it will increase student performance.

But, without the skills to be strategic learners, you’ll continue to see the same mediocre results. 

Study skills teach students how to:be organized,manage time,improve reading comprehension,listen effectively,take more comprehensive notes,communicate more effectively in written and oral expression

Once students have these skills, performance sky rockets in all subjects!

The 80:20 Rule: How to spend less time studying but be more productive

We all know how it feels to be inefficient: spending many hours “studying” without getting much productive work done can be incredibly frustrating, and is a drain on time and energy for students everywhere.

What if you could spend LESS time studying, but still get MORE done in your day? The secret to maximising productivity is The Pareto Principle, otherwise known as The 80:20 Rule. Pareto was an Italian economist in the early 1900s, and he declared that in many aspects of life, 80% of effects come from 20% of causes.

In other words, 80% of your exam success will come from 20% of the work you put in: Rather than spending hours and hours dragging out your homework and half working/half procrastinating, you should be focusing on how you can be as productive as possible when you sit down to work. This way, every task on your to-do list will take less time, but the result will be of a higher quality.

How to maximise that productive 20%

The key to successfully applying the Pareto Principle to your work is making the most of the 20% of your time that will produce 80% of your results. Here are a few ways that you can ensure maximum productivity when you study:

Use the Pomodoro Technique

Set yourself a 25 minute timer, and work on your chosen task until the timer rings. Take a short break before you start your next 25 minutes. Once you’ve completed for ‘Pomodoros’, take a longer break (20-30 minutes)

Minimise distractions

Use apps to minimise distractions during these 25 minute bursts of work. Strict Workflow, a Google Chrome extension, allows you to create a blacklist of websites to block for 25 minutes at a time. Similarly, Forest occupies your phone screen with a growing tree seedling for half an hour, which will die if you swipe off the app before your work time is complete!

Choose a work space

Consistently studying in the same place will help you to condition yourself to concentrate more readily when you sit down to work. Find a location with plenty of natural light, a large work surface, and as few distractions as possible. Why not try your dining table, a spot near a window in a library, or your bedroom desk?

Be clear about what you want to achieve

Before each Pomodoro begins, have clearly in mind what work you want to get done in the next 25 minutes. Write a list of the tasks you need to complete this week, and break each one into small steps of around 25 minutes in length to be used as Pomodoros. Cross these off as you go.


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