4.
Successful people learn that a student and a teacher make a team. Most teachers
want exactly what you want: they would like for you to learn the material in
their respective classes and earn a good grade.
Successful
students reflect well on the efforts of any teacher; if you have learned your
material, the instructor takes some justifiable pride in teaching. Join forces
with your instructor, they are not an enemy, you share the same interests, the
same goal – in short, and you’re teammates. Get to know your professor. You’re
the most valuable players on the same team. Your jobs are to work together for
mutual success. Neither wishes to chalk up a losing season. Be a team player!
5.
Successful students don’t sit in the back. Successful students minimize
classroom distractions that interfere with learning. Students want the best
seat available for their entertainment dollars, but willingly seek the worst
seat for their educational dollars. Students who sit in the back cannot
possibly be their teacher’s teammate (see n.4)
6.
Successful students take good notes. Successful students take notes that are
understandable and organized, and review them often. Why put something into
your notes you don’t understand? Ask the questions know that are necessary to
make your notes meaningful at some later time. A short review of your notes
while the material is still fresh on your mind helps you learn then, the less
you’ll have to learn later and the less time it will take because you won’t
have to include some deciphering time, also. The whole purpose of taking notes
is to use them, and use them often. The more you use them, the more they
improve.
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