1 / 13

Getting going with your course work

STAY AHEAD AUTUMN PROGRAMME 2011 . Getting going with your course work. Sara Steinke. Aims of the session. Reflect upon the key common barriers to starting coursework – and consider how to avoid them Getting motivated and planning your work

arvin
Download Presentation

Getting going with your course work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. STAY AHEADAUTUMN PROGRAMME 2011 Getting going with your course work Sara Steinke

  2. Aims of the session • Reflect upon the key common barriers to starting coursework – and consider how to avoid them • Getting motivated and planning your work • Reflect upon your present strengths in starting coursework, the areas for improvement that you are hoping for and the strategies that work best for you

  3. Think about the following • What do you think are the most common barriers to starting coursework? • Which of these barriers have you experienced in your first term at Birkbeck? • What have you done to overcome these barriers?

  4. You are not alone... • Procrastination • Perfectionism • Lack of self discipline • Worrying • Personal • Disorganisation • Lack of priorities • Inability to say ‘no’ • Indecisiveness • Socialising (too much) • Intrusions (visitors, calls) • Not finding resources • Excessive family demands • Not able to contact people

  5. Tricks for getting startedSee Cottrell 2008: 173 • Free writing Write all your ideas as fast as you can for three minutes, don’t bother about sentences or punctuation • Mind mapping • Talking Talk out loud to yourself, record/listen to yourself • Question banks What, where, when, why • Summing up in a few words/sentences

  6. Helps you generate ideas • Helps you find the specific focus of your topic • Gets you started writing at an early stage • Look for different possible answers rather than ‘one solution’ • Allow yourself to think of crazy suggestions • Suspend judgment on which ideas might be useful

  7. Class activity: brainstorming studying

  8. Reflective/active learning • Write down the three most important things that you have learnt/thought about in this session? Why were they important to you? 2. Are there any areas of improvement that you need to take action on? If so, what are you doing to do to improvement this aspect of your learning?

  9. Recap of the session • Identified the key common barriers to starting coursework – and received help and advice on how to avoid them • Discussed techniques for motivation and planning • Reflected upon your present strengths in starting coursework, the areas for improvement that you are hoping for and the strategies that work best for you

More Related