So what would it take, on average, to do well in regards to study time?

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So what do you guys think?

  • Too much!!! All of that isn't needed to ace prereqs. Drop it down a bit

    Votes: 2 20.0%
  • Good Strategy...you should be fine

    Votes: 8 80.0%
  • Bad Strategy...not efficient

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Not enough!!! You need to study even harder

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    10

thirk_dds

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I plan on restarting prereqs in Spring '17 for d school and have been doing serious research on study habits. I will have to work 30 hours a week at least but I probably move my days around classes. I will take chem 1 and bio 1 (don't know about labs yet), but what would be a good study average time to do well? I know there are no exact formulas or anything, but, I was considering on going for 2 hours/class and 6-7 days/week. Is this overkill??

Daily Strategy: Dont miss classes (ever)
Read ahead in book and take notes/go over slides
Take notes to class and take class notes to compare the two to find what's really important
Stay ahead so i have at least a day/class to do problems/questions on weekends for each chapter
Study a week in advance for exams doing nothing but problems/questions, or seeking additional help.

I would like to apply this concept to every science course....Too much????

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My undergrad told us to expect to study 3 hours per credit hour each week. So if you took a 3 credit hour course, expect to put in 9 hours a week studying for that class. If you took an 18 credit hour semester, than you will be studying around 54 hours a week. Obviously this varied based on the difficulty of the class, how well you studied, and whether it was midterms/finals week.
 
For me, it was however long it took me to rewrite my notes and study ahead for the next day. Sometimes that took like 2 hours and I had the rest of the day free, sometimes I was studying until midnight!
 
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Sometimes, I think that people - myself included - put too much investment in the amount of time they have/will study rather than how much they actually learned. This method really helped me utilize my study time more efficiently and saved me hundreds of wasted hours in the library. I hope it helps.
 
Sometimes, I think that people - myself included - put too much investment in the amount of time they have/will study rather than how much they actually learned. This method really helped me utilize my study time more efficiently and saved me hundreds of wasted hours in the library. I hope it helps.

Watching now. Thanks bro
 
For me, it was however long it took me to rewrite my notes and study ahead for the next day. Sometimes that took like 2 hours and I had the rest of the day free, sometimes I was studying until midnight!

Yeah exactly, then I have to do this for both classes outside of work
 
My undergrad told us to expect to study 3 hours per credit hour each week. So if you took a 3 credit hour course, expect to put in 9 hours a week studying for that class. If you took an 18 credit hour semester, than you will be studying around 54 hours a week. Obviously this varied based on the difficulty of the class, how well you studied, and whether it was midterms/finals week.

What's funny is if you break it down per week, on average it's only an 1.5 hours/day/class...not too much
 
Everyone is different... You'll quickly figure out how many hours YOU need to put in to do well after an exam or two.
 
It definitely varies. A good rule is 2 hours for every hour you're in class. 1 hour to prep for the next class and 1 hour to review last class. However for Ochem it turned into about 3-4 hours a day of studying. It varies for sure
 
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