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4 answers

I would suggest three things:

1.) Better organization - including saving old notes from previous chapters at home instead of at school, so they can be referenced. Use the first 5-10 minutes of the study hour to stay organized.

2.) Better note taking - By taking better notes, she will use less time during your study hour trying to remember stuff - it'll be right there for her.

3.) Use part of the study hour to create new study materials. The very act of creating a vocabulary list or formula list (with proofs, at higher levels) for classes will help commit those things to long-term memory. Once committed to long term memory, they don't have to be re-studied later, and the created study materials can be used for final exams.

2006-09-14 05:30:54 · answer #1 · answered by ³√carthagebrujah 6 · 0 0

Does she watch soap serials? If she does you seriously need to stop that!! Teenagers need atleast nine hours of sleep....so let her go to bed early. Cut of her afternoon nap. If at all she is tired, you can let her have a nap for an hour. First comes, homework than all the revision. Too much study is also not good. She should study for about 2 and a half hours. Than take a break from about 1 hour where she can listen to some light music and relax. She could also help you in some household chores!!! Studying in the morning helps.....She will be fresh and everything which she learned the previous day would be brushed up again..... SHE SHOULD EAT FOUR ALMONDS DAILY!!!! Let the almonds be soaked in water the previous night and than remove the skin and eat it......

GOOD LUCK!!!!
Even I have to follow these steps when I come in grade 10!!!

2006-09-14 12:33:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you want to increase your daughter's study hour, then it wouldn't be study hour. (That was a joke.)

Seriously, you have to look at her time in the whole.

She needs AT LEAST 9 hours of sleep. (Most teenagers do...) Plus, her time to eat, and school. How much time does she have left? Now, how much time is spent NOT studying? Does she do extra-curricular things? Is she spending too much time with that?

What is MOST important is not how much time is she STUDYING, but how much NON-STUDYING time does she have.

The WORST thing you cold do is to encourage her to burn both ends of the candle.

She needs time for school, sure... But she also needs time for herself, and her friends, AND, MOST IMPORTANTLY, Y*O*U.

2006-09-14 11:57:10 · answer #3 · answered by ICG 5 · 0 0

Simple give your daughter motivation ,something like if you study you can go our to 23.00 pm or give some extra cash or something like that.
Its was work with me :)

2006-09-14 12:22:53 · answer #4 · answered by Zlatko M 1 · 0 0

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