Smart Students

Friday, March 16, 2012

How to Become an Excellent Student


Do you want to be at the top of your class, but don't know where to start. Great students know how to get ahead in class, and you can, too. Here are a few great tips on how to become an excellent student.
1. Be on time and prepared for class. This seems like a no-brainer, but many students are late and not ready for class, resulting in missing important details, deadline notices and instructions.
2. Sit in the front of the class. You can eliminate 90 percent of classroom distractions by sitting in the front. Plus, students who sit in the first two rows of seats usually have the best grades in the class.
·         3. Get involved with the lesson and interact with the class materials and the teacher. Ask questions and discuss everyday. When you ask questions, you gain ownership of the materials, ultimately helping you remember more facts, figures and ideas.
·         4.Turn in all homework and assignments on time or early if you can. Many teachers give points everyday for homework. Not only do you get your homework points, the homework helps reinforce classroom material.
·         5. Take 10 minutes each night per class to review your notes. Great students do not soak up all the information during class and magically retain it until the test. Refresh your mind and re-read your notes, graded homework assignments and past quizzes.
·         6. Go to any extra study groups or meet with your teacher to talk about material that you may be having problems within the class. Missing a few key details can make you flop on a test. Stay on top of your game in each class.
·         7. Allow your curiosity to help you dig deeper into the class. Find something you want to know more about in the class materials and explore. Creative students who ask questions get more out of each class.

Smart Students Secrets Revealed


If you look around in your class, there are always a few students doing well in every course. How can you do to be like them?

Simple enough: Just do what they do!

Smart students have a well-patterned
study skills, starting up in lectures. Here are the top 10 tips in how to be the smart ones in lectures – getting the most out of classroom time.

Tip # 1: Come prepared – preview the chapter first before going into the lecture, this is the main difference between A’s and B’s.

Tip #2: Keep the questioning mind – as you preview the chapter, come up a list of questions. Try to find answers to those questions during lectures. Also write down the questions on the instructor’s lecture as it goes.

Tip #3: Write your lecture notes after – Take brief notes during lectures and complete them soon after class when it’s still fresh in memory.

Tip #4: Rewrite the headings as questions – The questioning headings and subheadings provoke your
critical thinking and deepen your understanding.

Tip #4: Make a master list of questions – Try to find answers to those questions during lectures and reading.

10 good lifestyle options you can fol­low to main­tain, and improve, your brains


  1. Learn what is the “It” in “Use It or Lose It”. A basic under­stand­ing will serve you well to appre­ci­ate your brain’s beauty as a liv­ing and constantly-developing dense for­est with bil­lions of neu­rons and synapses.
  2. Take care of your nutri­tion. Did you know that the brain only weighs 2% of body mass but con­sumes over 20% of the oxy­gen and nutri­ents we intake? As a gen­eral rule, you don’t need expen­sive ultra-sophisticated nutri­tional sup­ple­ments, just make sure you don’t stuff your­self with the “bad stuff”.
  3. Remem­ber that the brain is part of the body. Things that exer­cise your body can also help sharpen your brain: phys­i­cal exer­cise enhances neurogenesis.
  4. Prac­tice pos­i­tive, future-oriented thoughts until they become your default mind­set and you look for­ward to every new day in a con­struc­tive way. Stress and anx­i­ety, no mat­ter whether induced by exter­nal events or by your own thoughts, actu­ally kills neu­rons and pre­vent the cre­ation of new ones. You can think of chronic stress as the oppo­site of exer­cise: it pre­vents the cre­ation of new neurons.
  5. Thrive on Learn­ing and Men­tal Chal­lenges. The point of hav­ing a brain is pre­cisely to learn and to adapt to chal­leng­ing new envi­ron­ments. Once new neu­rons appear in your brain, where they stay in your brain and how long they sur­vive depends on how you use them. “Use It or Lose It” does not mean “do cross­word puz­zle num­ber 1,234,567″. It means, “chal­lenge your brain often with fun­da­men­tally new activities”.

How To Pay Attention in the Classroom


Do you have difficulty paying attention to what is happening in your classrooms?

  • Resist distractions by sitting in front of the room away from disruptive classmates and by focusing on the instructor through active listening and note taking
  • Put yourself in the "mood" with attentive expression and posture; do not sprawl
  • Shift position in your seat every so often Don't sit frozen in one position .Shifting on occasion will help keep the blood circulating, send more oxygen to your brain, and help you remain alert
  • When appropriate: ask a question, ask for more clarity, or engage your teacher and the class in dialogue
  • Train yourself not to give in to distractions

How can you be a smart student


Everyone hope to be a smart student but not many can do it. Therefore i wrote this article to help those who wanted to be a smart student.
Who is a smart student and how to be one of them?
Smart students are student who are considered better than the other students. They are also said to have better brains and some say they are clever. I can say that this is not the fact as everyone begin from nothing when they were delivered to the world.
Therefore everyone can be a smart student if you work for it. But the question is how to be one of them? This is one of the most common questions asked but not many people knew the answer. The only way to be a smart student is by studying using visual. An experiment had been conducted and it is prove that a human can remember visual better than words. Therefore, we should always use different visual such as pictures.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Top 10 Memory Improvement Tips


Improve Your Memory With These Great Tips
Before you study for your next exam, you might want to use a few strategies to boost your memory of important information. There are a number of tried and tested techniques for improving memory. These strategies have been established within cognitive psychology literature and offer a number of great ways to improve memory, enhance recall and increase retention of information.

1. Focus your attention on the materials you are studying.

Attention is one of the major components of memory. In order for information to move from short-term memory into long-term memory, you need to actively attend to this information. Try to study in a place free of distractions such as television, music and other diversions.

2. Avoid cramming by establishing regular study sessions.

According to Bjork (2001), studying materials over a number of session's gives you the time you need to adequately process the information. Research has shown that students who study regularly remember the material far better than those who did all of their studying in one marathon session.

3. Structure and organize the information you are studying.

8 Tips You Can Use To Remember Whatever You Read


Despite tele­vi­sion, cell phones, and Web “twit­ter, forum, blog” tra­di­tional read­ing is still an impor­tant skill. Whether it is school text­books, tech man­u­als at work, or reg­u­lar books, peo­ple still read, though not as much as they used to. One rea­son that many peo­ple don’t read much is that they don’t read well. For them, it is slow, hard work and they don’t remem­ber as much as they should. Stu­dents, for example, may have to read some­thing sev­eral times before they under­stand and remem­ber what they read.
Why? You would think that schools teach kids how to read and remember well. Schools do try. I work with some teach­ers and they tell me that many stu­dents are 2–3 years behind grade level in read­ing pro­fi­ciency. No doubt, tele­vi­sion, video, games, cell phones, and the Web are major con­trib­u­tors to this prob­lem, which will appar­ently get worse if we don’t empha­size and improve read­ing instruction.
Some of the blame can be placed on the fads in read­ing teach­ing, such as phon­ics and “whole lan­guage,” which some­times are pro­moted by zealots who don’t respect the need for both approaches. Much of the blame for poor read­ing skills can be laid at the feet of par­ents who set poor exam­ples and, of course, on the young­sters who are too lazy to learn how to read well.
For all those who missed out on good read­ing skills, it is not too late. Read the summary below what it takes to read with good speed and comprehension.
1. Read with a pur­pose.
2. Skim first.
3. Get the read­ing mechan­ics right.
4. Be judi­cious in high­light­ing and note tak­ing.
5. Think in pic­tures.
6. Rehearse as you go along.
7. Stay within your atten­tion span and work to increase that span.
8. Rehearse again soon.

1) Know Your Purpose

7 Techniques To Improve Your memory



Here are some strategies you can use as a Nigeria Students in Nigeria to help you to memorize  vocabulary terms and conjugation rules quickly:
Make Creative Associations When you memorize a new word or grammar rule, try to develop a fun way to make it stick. The more outlandish the association, the better it would stick. Use association that would help you to remember the word easily. I know this sound simplistic, but it really works.
Break-up Your Study Time Human brains tend to remember less the longer we study. That’s why it’s often easier for you to remember the beginning and end of a lecture than all the details in between. So you will find out that by studying in short one hour stints helped you to remember more. Everyone is different, so find out what amount of study time is perfect for you. You might find that you can study more in three one-hour sessions than one four-hour session.
Use Your Mind and Body Sitting at a desk staring at some grammar rules might work for some people, but always learned quicker by actively doing something with the information. Draw association pictures or read your book aloud to help make things more permanent in your mind.