Learning Strategies
Knowing some basic learning strategies can help you in your
career or business. It also can make you the person who always
has something interesting to say. You CAN learn more efficiently.
All you have to do is use a few of the following techniques until
they become habit.
Create Curiosity and Anticipation
You'll learn more effectively with curiosity and anticipation
working for you, so how do you create this state of mind? A good
way is to end each learning session with a question or two clearly
in your mind. This creates anticipation and curiosity that will
help you next time you study. It's like a TV show going to a
commercial at an interesting moment in the program. You want
to stay tuned, to see what happens next.
Prepare For Learning
To learn new material, expose your mind to it as soon as possible,
before you even feel "ready," or have time to study.
The first stage of learning is the part where you look at new
ideas and say, "huh?" Do this quickly, however, reviewing
everything for a few minutes, and your unconscious mind will
start "incubating" the new concepts, and finding some
way to organize them.
Relate New Knowledge To What You Know
When you sit down to study new material, relate it to what
you already know. Compare and contrast things, saying to yourself,
"That's like...," or "How is that different from..."
Autoresponders were new to me
when I started my newsletters, but the concept sunk in and motivated
me when I thought, "It's like someone doing all my addressing
and mailing for pennies a day." This prompted the important
questions, and I was ready to learn.
Use Imagination
Just changing your perspective is one of the great learning
strategies. For example, study with the idea in mind that you
will be teaching what you're learning. As you study something,
imagine how you'll teach it. This is a powerful way to get a
good grasp on new information.
You can also imagine how you'll use what you are learning.
There's so much information, and so little of it is the truly
"important stuff." But by imagining how you'll use
the new information, you tend to automatically focus on the things
you really need to know.
Take a Break
You can learn more by working less. The research shows that
we remember best what we study first and last in a given session.
So, by taking breaks, you create more "sessions," and
increase the number of firsts and lasts. Move around during your
breaks, as this can also keep your mind fresh.
Finding Time For Learning
What if it took no extra time to learn a new language, take
a negotiating course, or study something new and interesting?
Start using the dead-time in your day, the time sitting in your
car, or on the bus, or in a waiting room. Almost any public library
has hundreds of books on tape, and you can even instantly download
books on the internet.
This is one of the most under-utilized and easiest learning
strategies. If your job is 25 minutes away you spend 200 hours
per year sitting in your car going to or from work. Could you
learn something useful if you had four hours per week of audio
instruction for a year? The only extra time it takes is a few
minutes to stop by the library.
Almost nothing works just by reading about it. So why not
scan the list above and start using one or two of these learning
strategies?
Related Pages:
Power of Concentration
: How to have it.
How To Improve
Brain Function : Fast easy ways.
Problem Solving 101 | Learning Strategies |