If you’re heading for a discussion group, how can you participate
without your reading as a basis? I think the lousiest feeling in the world
is sitting in a classroom knowing that, sooner or later, you are going
to be called on and you don’t know the material.
Remember: Completing your reading assignment includes not just
reading the
main text but any
other books or articles assigned, plus
handouts that may have been previously passed out. It also means
completing any nonreading assignments—turning in a lab report,
preparing a list of topics, or being ready to present your oral report.
Needless to say, while doing your homework is important,
turning it
in is an essential second step! My daughter, Lindsay, refused to use
any organizational system for a short time. As a result, in addition to
a host of missed appointments and forgotten assignments, she would
often forget to pack the homework she
did do, or bring it to school
but forget to turn it in.
One simple change I made in her routine has made a world of
difference: She now has a bright red manila folder, marked
“HOMEWORK,” into which she puts every completed assignment
the instant it’s done. When she gets to class, she immediately pulls
out her folder to see if she has something to turn in. (She’s also given
up on her “nonorganizational” system, but that’s another story.)
Dostları ilə paylaş: