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Learn how to effectively manage your time and minimize stress by setting priorities, planning ahead, and utilizing time-saving techniques. This article provides practical tips and strategies for maximizing your available time and accomplishing your goals.
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Chapter 9 Time Management
Because time is a finite and valuable resource, learning to use it wisely requires both leadership skills and management functions There is a close relationship between time management and stress Good time-management skills allow an individual to spend time on things that matter Time Management Is Making Optimal Use of Available Time
Three Cyclic Steps • Allow time for planning and establishing priorities • Complete the highest priority task whenever possible • Try to finish one task before beginning another • Reprioritize based on remaining tasks and new information that may have been received
Reminder • Two mistakes common in planning are underestimating the importance of a daily plan and not allowing adequate time for planning
The Smart Approach to Studying • 1. Set specific, clear goals to be accomplished • 2. Record your progress as measurable progress maintains your interest • 3. Identify the steps needed to accomplish your goals • 4. Be realistic about your time constraints and set goals that can be accomplished within these constraints • 5. Set a time frame and plan for this • Adapted from: Pugsley, L. (2009, May). How to… study effectively. Education for Primary Care, 20(3), 195–197.
Creating a Time-Efficient Work Environment • Gather all supplies needed before starting an activity • Group activities that are in the same location • Use time estimates • Document nursing interventions as soon as possible after they are completed • Always strive to end the work day on time
Daily Planning Actions to Utilize Time • Identify key priorities to be accomplished that day • Determine the expected level of achievement of a prioritized task • Assess the staff assigned to work with you • Review the short- and long-term plans of the unit • Plan ahead for meetings • Allow time to assess progress of goal attainment • Take regular breaks and use electronic calendars
Three Categories of Prioritization • 1. “Don’t do” • 2. “Do later” • 3. “Do now”
Three Basic Steps in Time Management • Allow time for planning and establish priorities • Complete the highest-priority task whenever possible, and finish one task before beginning another • Reprioritize based on the remaining tasks and on new information that may have been received
Priority setting is perhaps the most critical skill in good time management, because all actions we take have some type of relative importance Setting Priorities
Personal Organization—Knowing and Understanding How and Why You Use Time or Set Priorities as You Do • How do you waste time? • What types of work you avoid? • What is the best time of day for you to work? • How long you can work before becoming nonproductive?
Managing time is difficult if a person is unsure of his or her priorities for time management, including personal short-term, intermediate, and long-term goals Managing Time
Personal Characteristics of Time Wasting • Does not understand time planning • Cannot distinguish whatis important from what is not • Underestimates time and effort needed to accomplish tasks • Makes too many rules or procedures or approvals • Anxiety about planning robs energy • Does not look at the standard of work necessary
Making Lists • Remember that lists are planning tools and thus must be flexible! • Re-examine items that remain on the list day after day. Perhaps they do not need to be done or they need to be broken down into smaller tasks • Only put as many items on the daily list as can reasonably be accomplished in a day
Question Which is a pitfall of list making? • Being too flexible • Looking at one’s list too often • Including an unreasonable number of items on one’s list
Answer Answer: Rationale:
Internal Time Wasters • 1. Technology (Internet, gaming, e-mail, and social media sites) • 2. Socializing • 3. Paperwork overload • 4. A poor filing system • 5. Interruptions
Discouraging Socialization • Do not make yourself overly accessible • Interrupt a rambling person • Avoid promoting socialization • Schedule long-winded pests
Procrastination • Putting off something until a future time, postponing, or delaying needlessly • Not a character flaw, but a set of behaviors that develop over a period of time and that can be changed • The dread of doing a task uses more time and energy than doing the task itself
Some projects are not accomplished because they are not broken down into manageable tasks Manageable Tasks
The Time Inventory • Helps the individual determine how much time he or she spends on a particular task and what time of day he or she is most productive • It is important to maintain the time inventory for several days or even weeks and to repeat it annually to see if long-term changes have been made
Personal Time Management • Managing time is difficult if a person is unsure of his or her priorities for time management, including personal short-term, intermediate, and long-term goals
Bran’s 12 Habits to Master Time Management • Strive to be authentic • Favor trusting relationships • Maintain lifestyle that gives you maximum energy • Organize day by your biorhythms • Set very few priorities and stick to them • Turn down things inconsistent with your priorities • Set aside time for focused effort
Bran’s 12 Habits to Master Time Management—(cont.) • Always look for ways of doing thing better and faster • Build solid processes • Spot trouble ahead and solve problems immediately • Break goals into small units of work and think only about one unit at a time • Finish what is important and stop doing what is no longer worthwhile
Question Tell whether the following statement is true or false: According to Bran, one should master personal time by setting many priorities and sticking to them. • True • False
Answer Answer: Rationale: