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

  1. Draw pictures to illustrate key points
  2. Try Quizlet.com to create online flash cards and play review games
  3. Create two-column notes so you can cover up one side and quiz yourself on the information
  4. Study/Review notes with friends
  5. Highlight main points in your notes and review them 5 – 10 daily
  6. Re-write definitions you can’t remember several times
  7. “Google” pictures to remember key points
  8. Search topics on YouTube
  9. 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
  10. Teach the concepts you know to someone else; then, have them teach you
  11. Write out the answers to the “I can” statements to make sure you understand the subject
  12. Make a power point with questions and answers about each section and study
  13. Study with a brother or sister
  14. Study alone for 30 minutes; then, with a friend or parent
  15. Discuss homework questions with classmates to get other perspectives on the topic
  16. Post notecards around the house
  17. Categorize the information from the sections in the book and, then, study by category
  18. Post cards on a wall – when you get the answer right, flip it over, you’ve got it!

Study Strategies: 4th Hour

  1. As you review, reward yourself for getting the correct answers
  2. Have a friend test you
  3. Use Kahoot – an online test review game
  4. Create a Jeopardy game to review information – must create categories as part of the review
  5. Use Quizlet.com to create online flash cards
  6. Create a song that include the key points of the unit
  7. Play Hangman to review vocabulary terms
  8. Create a rhyme to remember key points
  9. Stay organized and focused!
  10. Create a Memory Game – word, then find definition
  11. Two-Column notes
  12. Pre-quiz
  13. Discussion group/study group
  14. Re-read notes and re-write key points
  15. Trivia game

Study Strategies: 6th Hour

  1. Study different subjects in different rooms (ex. Study Chinese philosophers in the Kitchen and the Persian Wars in the Family Room)
  2. Summarize key points using the “snip method” – re-read and paraphrase main ideas
  3. 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

  1. “Phone a Friend” Strategy – Call friends and talk to them about what they know and share what you know
  2. Study with family
  3. Create and play a review game
  4. “Guess that Picture” Review Game
  5. Reward yourself as you study – know the significance of the Battle of Marathon? Eat a KitKat!
  6. 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!
  7. Create a “Big Boy (or Girl) History Crossword Puzzle” online
  8. Set a time to study…and stick with it!
  9. Create a song that summarizes your notes/big ideas
  10. Study with a partner OR organize a study group
  11. Create a practice test (model questions after previous tests)
  12. Create Two-Column Notes – terms on one side, their importance on the other – fold in half to quiz yourself
  13. Make a jump rope rhyme
  14. Use an online quiz resource
  15. Color-code information
  16. Study Breaks!
  17. Have someone else make a test for you

Study Strategies: 7th Hour

  1. Charades (act out key concepts)
  2. Use an online quiz resource
  3. Ask parents to quiz you
  4. Create a song that summarizes the topic
  5. Design a pre-test (be sure to model test questions after past test questions) AND take it!
  6. Study questions and answers and gradually add more time in-between asking yourself the questions and checking the answers
  7. 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
  8. 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)
  9. 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
  10. “Pictionary” – draw a picture to represent key concepts
  11. Color Code Notes
  12. Design a timeline to track important events/cause and effect
  13. Create funny connections to the content to help you remember main ideas
  14. Make your own study guide
  15. Create images or phrases that connect to the information