1 / 12

Stay On Track! Organization Techniques for Finals and the End of the Semester

Academic Learning Center. Stay On Track! Organization Techniques for Finals and the End of the Semester. By: Victoria Williams Anna Urbanski, GA. Overview. Time management strategies Plan out end of semester Test anxiety causes and strategies Evaluation. Time Management.

qamra
Download Presentation

Stay On Track! Organization Techniques for Finals and the End of the Semester

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. Academic Learning Center Stay On Track!Organization Techniques for Finals and the End of the Semester By: Victoria Williams Anna Urbanski, GA

  2. Overview • Time management strategies • Plan out end of semester • Test anxiety causes and strategies • Evaluation

  3. Time Management • Choose a planner/organization tool • Link planner (SCSU bookstore) • Google or Outlook calendar • Phone • Make a list of all obligations • Work • Class • Organizations/Clubs/Teams • Family events

  4. Time Management cont. • Make a term schedule • All due dates from course syllabi (assignments, projects, exams, etc.) • Other activities and events • Leave room for additions • Make a weekly schedule • Fill in class, work, and activities of a typical week • Schedule daily study blocks • Be realistic! • Include time for fun • Be aware of best study locations and times of day

  5. Put It Into Practice! • Use these skills to plan out the remaining weeks of the semester, with special consideration of finals: • List all finals dates • Day and time • Location • Building and room number • Type of exam • Computer, paper, etc.; comprehensive or final units • Materials to study from • Lecture notes, textbook, study guides, etc.

  6. Test Anxiety • Two kinds • Anticipatory: anxiety experienced while studying • Comes in waves (of relatively short duration) • Situational: anxiety experienced while taking an exam

  7. Elements of Anxiety • Physiological—the physical elements • Symptoms (racing heart, stomach upset) • Freeze, flight, or fight results in “going blank.” • Cognitive—the mental element • Symptoms (concentration, attention, reading and understanding questions) • Self-talk • Behavioral—how you act • Symptoms (anxious, irritated, depressed, afraid) • Emotional—what you feel

  8. Where does Test Anxiety come from? • Poor study habits • Procrastination • Learned behavior • Worry about image

  9. What To Do • Better preparation • Improve general lifestyle • Learn physical relaxation techniques • Use positive self-talk • Manage the test environment • Improve test-taking skills

  10. To Prepare: • Go to class, read the book, do the homework, and review, review, review. • Learn how to take tests. • Manage your time! • Overcome procrastination!!!

  11. More Tips • Make healthy lifestyle choices • Get enough sleep • Eat the right foods • Exercise regularly • Practice relaxation techniques • Use positive self-talk • Manage the test environment Adapted from: Beating the Big, Bad Wolf: Conquering Test Anxiety, Gail McNeely, Austin Community College

  12. Academic Learning Center Subject Tutoring Centennial Hall 236 (320) 308-4993 alc@stcloudstate.edu www.stcloudstate.edu/alc One-on-One Study Skills and Time Management Anna Urbanski, GA 211B Centennial Hall (320) 308-4997 alcga2@stcloudstate.edu

More Related