Study Strategies: Fall 2014
First Semester our World Civilizations classes compiled a list of study strategies. Feel free to try them all OR email us a new one to add to the list! Happy Studying!
Study Strategies: 2nd Hour
- Draw pictures to illustrate key points
- Try Quizlet.com to create online flash cards and play review games
- Create two-column notes so you can cover up one side and quiz yourself on the information
- Study/Review notes with friends
- Highlight main points in your notes and review them 5 – 10 daily
- Re-write definitions you can’t remember several times
- “Google” pictures to remember key points
- Search topics on YouTube
- Listen to music and match the songs to the concepts you are studying – even if there is not a direct connection, you can still remember the concepts when you think of the song
- Teach the concepts you know to someone else; then, have them teach you
- Write out the answers to the “I can” statements to make sure you understand the subject
- Make a power point with questions and answers about each section and study
- Study with a brother or sister
- Study alone for 30 minutes; then, with a friend or parent
- Discuss homework questions with classmates to get other perspectives on the topic
- Post notecards around the house
- Categorize the information from the sections in the book and, then, study by category
- Post cards on a wall – when you get the answer right, flip it over, you’ve got it!
Study Strategies: 4th Hour
- As you review, reward yourself for getting the correct answers
- Have a friend test you
- Use Kahoot – an online test review game
- Create a Jeopardy game to review information – must create categories as part of the review
- Use Quizlet.com to create online flash cards
- Create a song that include the key points of the unit
- Play Hangman to review vocabulary terms
- Create a rhyme to remember key points
- Stay organized and focused!
- Create a Memory Game – word, then find definition
- Two-Column notes
- Pre-quiz
- Discussion group/study group
- Re-read notes and re-write key points
- Trivia game
Study Strategies: 6th Hour
- Study different subjects in different rooms (ex. Study Chinese philosophers in the Kitchen and the Persian Wars in the Family Room)
- Summarize key points using the “snip method” – re-read and paraphrase main ideas
- Sample Quest Prep Schedule:
Monday: Study 10 to 15 minutes
Tuesday:Study 15 – 20 minutes
Wednesday: Study 20 – 25 minutes
Thursday: Study 25 – 30 minutes
Friday: Earn an “A” on the quest
*Be sure to study the stuff you DON’T know, NOT the information you DO know
- “Phone a Friend” Strategy – Call friends and talk to them about what they know and share what you know
- Study with family
- Create and play a review game
- “Guess that Picture” Review Game
- Reward yourself as you study – know the significance of the Battle of Marathon? Eat a KitKat!
- Use the “Gummy Bear Technique” – place gummy bear at the end of each paragraph in the book. When you finish the paragraph, enjoy the gummy bear!
- Create a “Big Boy (or Girl) History Crossword Puzzle” online
- Set a time to study…and stick with it!
- Create a song that summarizes your notes/big ideas
- Study with a partner OR organize a study group
- Create a practice test (model questions after previous tests)
- Create Two-Column Notes – terms on one side, their importance on the other – fold in half to quiz yourself
- Make a jump rope rhyme
- Use an online quiz resource
- Color-code information
- Study Breaks!
- Have someone else make a test for you
Study Strategies: 7th Hour
- Charades (act out key concepts)
- Use an online quiz resource
- Ask parents to quiz you
- Create a song that summarizes the topic
- Design a pre-test (be sure to model test questions after past test questions) AND take it!
- Study questions and answers and gradually add more time in-between asking yourself the questions and checking the answers
- Create Two-Column Notes – terms on one side, their importance on the other – fold in half to quiz yourself OR questions on one side, answers on the other
- Two-Column, 3 color Study Guide – questions on one-side, color-coded answers on the other (ex. Blue Answers – you know REALLY well; Purple Answers – you had to go back to your notes/book to find; Red Answers – corrections/additions)
- Track what you know and don’t know in a Venn Diagram – re-write the information you don’t know or kind of know at least three times so you know it really well
- “Pictionary” – draw a picture to represent key concepts
- Color Code Notes
- Design a timeline to track important events/cause and effect
- Create funny connections to the content to help you remember main ideas
- Make your own study guide
- Create images or phrases that connect to the information