1 / 25

Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Styles

Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Styles. Brookhurst Junior High School 1 st Quarter Guidance Curriculum 2007 – 2008. ASCA Standard or Competency. Academic Development Domain Standards A, B, C A:A2.4 A:B1.3 A:C1.1. Objectives. How to take Cornell notes

Télécharger la présentation

Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Styles

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. Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Styles Brookhurst Junior High School 1st Quarter Guidance Curriculum 2007 – 2008

  2. ASCA Standard or Competency • Academic Development Domain Standards A, B, C • A:A2.4 • A:B1.3 • A:C1.1

  3. Objectives • How to take Cornell notes • How to use a student planner • How to maintain an organized notebook • How to develop good study skills • How to identify your learning style

  4. Cornell Notes • Set up your paper • Take the notes • Apply your thinking to the notes • Reflect on and Review your notes

  5. Set Up Your Paper Step 1: Create Lines

  6. Topic: Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Skills Name: Class: Period: Date: Set Up Your Paper • Step 2: Fill in Information • Topic • Name • Class • Period • Date

  7. Name: Class: Period: Date: Topic: Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Skills Set Up Your Paper Questions/Main Ideas Notes Questions/Main Idea Notes Summary Summary

  8. Topic: Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Skills Name: Class: Period: Date: Take Notes Questions/Main Ideas Notes • While the teacher lectures, while you watch a film, or while you read a text: • Write on the right hand side of the page • Abbreviate • Paraphrase • Use symbols to highlight what is important, or unclear, or to make connections. • Skip lines between ideas Summary

  9. Topic: Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Skills Name: Class: Period: Date: Apply your thinking to the notes Questions/Main Ideas Notes • Alone or with a Study Buddy study your notes, clarifying and completing them. Within 24 hours, use the left hand column to: • Identify main ideas by writing headers • Develop questions for study or clarification • Connect your notes to what you have learned before in that class, in previous years, and in other classes. Summary

  10. Topic: Organizational, Study Skills and Learning Skills Name: Class: Period: Date: Reflect on and Review your notes Questions/Main Ideas Notes • For each set of class notes, you need to take the time and summarize what was presented and learned for that day. • Review the main ideas • Summarize what is important • Explain why that is important • Reflect on how the new concept will enhance your learning Summary

  11. Student Planner 3 Main Sections • Brookhurst Information • Middle School TimeTracker • Destination Character

  12. Student Planner – Brookhurst Information • The first 20 pages on white paper • Pgs. 1-5: Information about personnel with school numbers, academic success, parent responsibilities, and bell schedule • Pgs. 6-15: Benchmark Testing dates and Curriculum for Academic Subjects • Pgs. 16-19: Dress Code and Discipline Policy • Pg. 20: Cornell Notes Template

  13. Student Planner – Middle School TimeTracker • Pgs. 1-9: general information about agenda • Pgs. 10-15: Monthly calendars • Pgs. 16-110: Weekly calendar • This is where you are writing your daily assignments • Use the “TODAY” ruler to mark the current week we are in • pgs: 111-120: Reference material

  14. Student Planner –Destination Character • Pgs. 1-31: Character Education Hard Work Respect Wise Choices Perseverance Citizenship Trustworthiness Caring Responsibility Fairness

  15. Organized Notebook • Supplies: • 3 ring binder • Student planner • class schedule (pg. 120 in student planner) • 8 binder dividers with tabs • Sheet protectors • pens and pencils

  16. Creating an organized notebook • Step 1: Place binder dividers in notebook • Step 2: Use class schedule to write a tab for each class that you have, include periods • Example: Per 1-PE

  17. Creating an organized notebook • Step 3: Place all work from each class in the correct periods • You can also add sheet protectors to each period to place work that still needs to be completed. For example, classwork and homework.

  18. 0 Good Study Skills • Get Organized – Use your student planner • Have all supplies ready before you study • Supplies to have: paper, notebooks, calculator, dictionary, pens, pencils, ruler, school books • Keep your backpack organized so you can find what you need without wasting time • Repack your bag at night to avoid rushing to find things in the morning • Don’t forget to pack your homework

  19. 0 Good Study Skills • Schedule a regular homework time for each day • Set up a study center • Choose a quiet area that is comfortable, neat, well-lit, and supplied with the materials that you’ll need. • Examples: your room at a desk, in a calm corner of the house, in a quiet part of the school, Homework Lab, or library • Avoid distractions while you study • This includes TV, loud music, windows with activity outside, phone, text-messaging, computers

  20. 0 Good Study Skills • Get a Study Buddy • Find someone in each class that you can get help from (phone number, e-mail) • Take breaks so you don’t wear yourself out • Have a snack, stretch, take a short walk • Find out what works best for you • Take Great Notes • Use Cornell Note-taking Strategy

  21. 0 What is your learning style? • Instructions: • For these questions, choose the first answer that comes to mind and circle on a, b, or c. Don’t spend too much time thinking about any one question. • Count the number of a’s, b’s, and c’s that you have and write the total number.

  22. 0 Visual Learning Style (if you circled mostly a’s) • use visual materials such as pictures, charts, maps, graphs, etc. • use multi-media (e.g. computers, videos, and filmstrips) • take numerous detailed notes or ask teacher to provide handouts • tend to sit in the front to have a clear view of their teachers when they are speaking so you can see their body language and facial expression • are usually neat and clean • often close their eyes to visualize or remember something • find something to watch if they are bored • like to see what they are learning • illustrate ideas as a picture or brainstorming bubble before writing them down • write a story and illustrate it • benefit from illustrations and presentations that use color • use color to highlight important points in text • are attracted to written or spoken language rich in imagery • prefer stimuli to be isolated from auditory and kinesthetic distraction • find passive surroundings ideal

  23. Auditory Learning (if you circled mostly b’s) • sit where they can hear but needn’t pay attention to what is happening in front • participate in class discussion/debates • make speeches and presentations • use a tape recorder during lectures instead of taking notes • create musical jingles to aid memorization • create mnemonics to aid memorization • discuss ideas verbally • dictate to someone while they write down their thoughts • use verbal analogies, and story telling to demonstrate their point • may not coordinate colors or clothes, but can explain why they are wearing what they are wearing • hum or talk to themselves or others when bored • acquire knowledge by reading aloud • remember by verbalizing lessons to themselves (if they don’t they have difficulty reading maps or diagrams or handling conceptual assignments like mathematics)

  24. Kinesthetic Learning Style(if you circled mostly c’s) • need to be active and take frequent breaks • move around to learn new things • work at a standing position • chew gum while studying • dress up your work space with posters • speak with their hands and with gestures • remember what was done, but have difficulty recalling what was said or seen • find reasons to tinker or move when bored • rely on what they can directly experience or perform • activities such as cooking, construction, engineering and art help them perceive and learn • enjoy field trips and tasks that involve manipulating materials • sit near the door or someplace else where they can easily get up and move around • are uncomfortable in classrooms where they lack opportunities for hands-on experience • communicate by touching and appreciate physically expressed encouragement, such as a pat on the back

  25. 0 Learning Styles • 3 different Learning Styles • Visual Learners • Learn by seeing and looking • Auditory Learners • Learn by hearing and listening • Kinesthetic Learners • Learn by touching and doing • Keep your learning style in mind when you are organizing and studying

More Related