HTML Preview Week Time Charts page number 1.


PLK-1/07 (rev’d: 5/16)
Using a Weekly Time Chart Effectively
1. Fill in the time slots with the name and course number of each of your classes.
2. Fill in other fixed activities: meals, work, extracurricular commitments, sleep, etc.
3. Determine amount of time needed weekly to study for each class (usually 3 hours of study
for each hour in class) and note that time on the sheet.
4. List other activities (exercising, socializing, personal care, housekeeping, etc.) and
approximate amount of time (weekly) you want to devote to them.
5. Consider personal factors that may impact your studying and scheduling:
a. Time of day you are most alert
b. Need for structure vs. flexibility
c. Ability to stay on a task despite distraction
6. Schedule study times on chart considering above personal factors and the following:
a. 30-50 minutes is the maximum amount of time most people can concentrate before
needing a 5-10 minute break
b. 90% of new information is forgotten within 24 hours unless it is reviewed
7. Reviewing old information immediately before new learning is to take place helps establish
an inter-connectedness between the two and thus significantly improves retention;
a. Re-learning takes less time than initial learning and is less likely to be forgotten.
8. Be sure to include time for long-term assignments (term papers, exams) and unexpected
demands.
9. Schedule a daily "personal planning session" for:
a. Reviewing time chart
b. Determining specific tasks to be accomplished that day;
c. Establishing priorities for their completion.
10. Schedule a weekly "long term project" review. Using a Mortar Board or monthly calendar,
chart dates of papers, tests and other activities needing long term planning. Use this weekly
review time to look at your calendar and determine specific activities you need to
accomplish for that week.
11. Complete rest of weekly chart to include other activities you listed in #4.
12. Follow completed chart for one week and then evaluate its effectiveness and
appropriateness. Revise it as necessary; both at end of week and periodically during the
semester.
~Use the chart on back~
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To think is easy. To act is difficult. To act as one thinks is the most difficult. | Johann Wolfgang Von Goeth