Quote from HewittI have a question about napping: What's more effective...
a) Study then sleep or
b) Sleep then Study
It's suppose to be study then sleep
Quote from HewittI have a question about napping: What's more effective...
a) Study then sleep or
b) Sleep then Study
Quote from HewittI have a question about napping: What's more effective...
a) Study then sleep or
b) Sleep then Study
My cousin actually does the latter, so he almost never "wakes up for school". He says thats when the brain works hard the most. It's unhealthy but does it really work?
Quote from Hewitt
What you are describing is not a study habit. It's procrastination. That's like saying you work hard to get paid by robbing banks. It's completely out of scope.
Quote from HewittYou may actually have study habits lest you would have already dropped out, but it's probably something you take for granted or don't notice. And if you legitimately already know or are smart enough, then you must have another way that knowledge is coming through you.
Quote from EnvoyIf you "hardly study", I doubt that your post was a great contribution to a thread about study.
"I'm just naturally good, therefore I can do all shit last minute".
And if you are "vague" and "short" about something, that is just telling me that you have nothing worth saying.
Your intention and message was exactly the same as Hatchet Haro, Youwishjellyfish, Miracle, except you wanted to be "clever" and find a way to get past Hewitt's warning. Please don't justify the stupidity of your post.
Quote from ZedThis girl just turned up and got on with it
Quote from NaimadPardon me but, do you mean to say that she got high before writing her dissertation?
Quote from HewittThat was a very informative piece on sleeping. I might try that since I'm taking nightschool and I have this sliver of free time after work before I hit the books. I'm just usually afraid I might never wake up again and waste the night.
I also like to reccomend that when you're tasked to read a shitload of stuff for the next lecture, that you jump around the middle and end before actually reading the article as a whole. It's helped me tons for reading 30-pages of textbook material (and the occsaional 30 more for supplemental reading) everyday. The strategy is to divide and conquer the text instead of taking it head on.
Also if one can find a way to immerse themselves in the subject their reading about, it would get them more interested in the text. Often asking yourself why you take x up and why its necessary can help your drive to muddle through the boring bits of your homework.