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5 answers

You are on to something here. Let us know how not studying pays off.

2007-01-31 15:03:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I used to have an entire book to read for class (theoretical stuff, not literature), and ten minutes prior, I'd go into the computer lab and pull up an interview with the author - get their major points of view and go to class and blab the whole time about the author, with a couple of quotes thrown in...

As far as tests go, I've been known to scribble some notes and study them while driving to take the test (awful driver-safety, but i passed).

I'm now halfway thru my dissertation....

So don't ask me.

P.S., if you are anything like me (perenially busy, hate to study, prefer 'hands on' or socratic learning), read books on the 80/20 rule - how to get what you need done with the minimum of wasted time/effort - and devote your time and effort to what you do really well and are truly interested in.

Just a thought from a 'non study-er'

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2007-01-31 23:06:22 · answer #2 · answered by cyclgrrl 3 · 0 0

Well...- How important is it to Graduate? There's a direct connection between the two.

2007-01-31 23:05:46 · answer #3 · answered by Joseph, II 7 · 0 1

To convince yourself you know the material.

For lots of people it helps, but some people don't need to.

2007-01-31 23:05:36 · answer #4 · answered by Adventuresome Ron 2 · 0 0

Do you really expect a serious reply to that question?

2007-01-31 23:11:10 · answer #5 · answered by GeneL 7 · 0 1

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