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Classroom
LearningCompared
to classrooms in some countries,
United States' classrooms tend to be
informal.
There are, however, some very
important basic rules:
Before class:
- Do your homework!
Read critically; form your own
opinions
- Review your notes
from the previous lecture and
reading for the day
- Communicate immediately
with professors
about any study problems
- Focus on the task at hand
before class:
take a moment of silence to
gather your thoughts and
mentally prepare yourself to the
topic
- Write any objectives
that come to mind at the
head of your notepaper:
- preparing for an
up-coming test,
- understanding a
particular concept,
- gaining a good
foundation on a topic
- understanding or
reviewing the readings
In Class:
- Arrive on time
for class.
Professors do not take lateness
lightly
- Position yourself in
the classroom
to focus on the subject matter;
consider the best location for:
- listening
- asking questions
- seeing visual materials
- discussing--not only
with the teacher but also
your classmates
- Avoid
distractions
that may interfere with your
concentration
(daydreaming, looking around the
room, talking to a friend,
passing notes, dozing)
- Evaluate as you
listen:
- Decide what is important
and should be placed in your
notes and what can be
left out;
- Listen long enough to be
sure you understand what was
said before writing.
- Ask clarifying
questions (but wait for
"breaks" in the instructor's
stream).
- Review your class
objective(s) throughout
the class period
- Did your objective(s)
mesh with the instructor's
introductory remarks?
- Has the class digressed
from stated objectives,
yours or the instructor's?
- Write a "to do" list
including
- assignments;
- reviewing difficult
concepts;
- joining study groups;
- making appointments with
a study pal, tutor, or the
instructor.
One resource often
overlooked is a classmate
who seems to have a good
grasp of the material. If it
seem appropriate, seek the
individual out for help.
Periodically ask
yourself if the course
is meeting your
objectives.
If you find
yourself dissatisfied
with a particular class
or the course in
general, make an
appointment with the
instructor to discuss
your expectations.
The earlier the
better. |
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