subject: British Academics - How To Motivate Yourself To Study [print this page] British Academics - How To Motivate Yourself To Study
Your drive and objective to learn greatly affects your motivation. As a student, you are expected to deliver well in most of your subjects, a sense of discouragement sometimes sets in especially when you experienced in the past that expectations were too high and you failed to deliver, or at times that you feel inadequate. Neglecting to correct destructions distractions may hold back learning.
Here are ways to that you can use to increase your motivation to study. They need not be sequential. Choose among the styles listed below that may best apply to your learning and studying styles.
1. Identify distractions such as stressors, negative attitudes, pressure, negative foresight and even an unpleasant environment can cause you to put off studying.
2. Create a conducive environment. You will be more inclined to study if you feel comfortable.
3. Eliminate or modify what you consider distractions.
4. Gauge what you know about the topic that you have to learn, check too, your strengths and weaknesses which can affect your learning process.
5. Are support systems available? For example, a tutor or your teacher.
6. Study with a group or with your friends. Avoid making this a time to chatter. Instead, use one another that will serve as a support group.
7. Designate a study time. Be religious in following it. Avoid delaying what you have set for studying. Choose a time that will conform to you, making studying a part of your system or make it a daily routine as if brushing your teeth or taking a bath.
8. When you feel that you need to take a break, try to stop at a point where you are at something that is easy for you. This will make it easier for you to resume studying after your break.
9. Make your long-term goals your motivation. Reassess what you want to achieve.
10. Accomplish the hardest or least liked first, and then "reward" yourself with more enjoyable studies.
11. Be positive and establish sensible goals for a study session. Starting alone, may be the hardest part if you have assume that it would be "unattainable" or " unbearable"
12. Create a motivational poster. Place it where you can see it while studying. The words and pictures in the poster should promote optimism and enthusiasm
13. Create visual aids which can help you understand the subject better. You can even create several copies of it. Hang it in places where you usually are like your own room, the living room, or even on your ceiling so that you can look at it before you sleep or when you wake up.
14. Carry notes on the subject you are studying so that when you are inside a bus or stuck in traffic, waiting on a line, or basically doing nothing, your time would not be wasted.
15. REWARD YOURSELF. After doing a good job, give yourself something desirable. After all, you deserve it!
16. If none of these suggestions work, think of the aftermath of not studying.
Try using one or more methods above. As you become at ease with a strategy, attempt to move to another. Remember to begin with a strategy which appear applicable and achievable to you.