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Make sure you're properly hydrated - keep a jug of water nearby and keep sipping away at a glass of water. Your brain won't work as well as it should otherwise.

Take regular short breaks, move around, stretch, etc.

Identify your learning style. Everybody has their own way of learning and retaining information - some people learn things better when they hear them, some need to see things visually, some need to work things through physically, try them out for themselves. If you know which sort of learner you are, you can put the subjects you need to study into a format you'll be able to remember and understand better. So, if you're a visual learner, draw charts; if you learn what you hear then record tapes for yourself... You should be able to find a learning styles quiz online, to work out your own style.

Hope this helps!

2007-02-14 22:15:07 · answer #1 · answered by Marzipan 4 · 1 0

What is your goal.What are the things you need to achieve that goal.Do you really interested in your work.It may be studies or games whatever may be.On any thing you can concentrate if you basically have interest on that.If you give the hum of a song,people will able to say the name of the film and even any details related to that song immediately.This is because of the interest.Our mind has so much potential to hold things.But unfortunately most of us are not utilising the fullest capacity of it.

2007-02-14 22:15:37 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1.dont switch on tv or radio while studying.
2.dont lie down while studying
3.do meditation during exams 2 improve ur concentration power
4.study in a lonely place
5.study for 2hrs and then take off 15 mins. so dat d mind is relaxed
6.eat healthy foods and not junk foods.

2007-02-14 22:08:00 · answer #3 · answered by yash SCHOLAR 1 · 0 0

1. pranayam- breath is the base of mind movement pranayam improves it.
2. exercise at least 15 min daily and not more than 30 min.: body muscles and mind work together
3. no movies n no TV serials: bad / bold scenes imprinted on inner mind disturbs concentration
4. have food control, no too much oily, hot etc:- food has direct impact on mind concentration
5. meditation (many ways , choose 1 u like) for 5 min. before bed
6. be pleased inside thinking positive
7. work hard
best luck,

2007-02-14 22:20:36 · answer #4 · answered by narendra b 5 · 0 0

nicely there's a lot you ought to do. at the starting up, you want to come across a extremely, tidy area the position you may concentration. be particular you've more than a number of area and do not experience all cluttered up. also, be particular you're taking more than a number of breaks in between your learn time. inspite of if that's only a 15 minute sit, it may help you concentration. also, be particular you frequently get a sturdy nights sleep. Staying up all nighttime to learn receives you nowhere and could easily make you commence forgetting issues. even as i replaced into reading for checks, i found that once i replaced into in mattress virtually to pass to sleep, it facilitates to attempt to sum up what youve learnt that day. inspite of if that's in elementary words some issues. You take up the most information once you're virtually to pass to sleep, so it realy facilitates. sturdy success ! -x-x-

2016-11-03 12:25:46 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

L E A R N I N G S K I L L S

Thorndike’s Laws of Learning

• Law of Readiness: People learn best when they are ready to learn.

• Law of Exercise: People can enhance their memory through repeti-tion, based on drill and practice. Those things repeated are best remembered.

• Law of Effect: Learning is strengthened when it is accompanied with a pleasant or nonthreatening situation or environment but is decreased when associated with an unpleasant situation or envi-ronment.

• Law of Primacy: First impressions are often strong, almost unshak-able. Things learned first stay with us longer.

• Law of Intensity: Learners learn more from doing the real thing than a substitute.

• Law of Recency: This law basically means, all things being equal, things most recently learned are best remembered.


The Five Truths of Learning

1. It is OK to make mistakes.

2. Everyone learns in her own unique way and according to her own clock.

3. It is intelligent to ask for help. No one has to do it alone.

4. We can do more and learn more when we are willing to take risks.

5. Everyone needs to think and learn.


20 MEMORY TECHNIQUES

Experiment with the following techniques to make a flexible, custom-made memory system that fits your learning style. The 20 techniques are divided into four categories, each of which represents a general principle for improving memory.

1. Organize it. Organized information is easy to find.

2. Use your body. Learning is an active process; get all your senses involved.

3. Use your brain. Work with your memory, not against it.

4. Recall it. This is easier when you use the other principles to store information.
The first three categories (1 - 16 techniques) are about storing information effectively.

Most memory battles are won or lost here. ORGANIZE IT

1. Learn from the general to the specific.
• Look at the big picture: Use surveying, reconnaissance, and skimming techniques.
• If you’re lost, step back and look at the big picture.

2. Make it meaningful.
• Know what you want from your education, then look for connections between
what you want and what you are studying.

3. Create associations.
• When you introduce new information, you can recall it more effectively if you
store it near similar or related information.
USE YOUR BODY

4. Learn it once, actively.
• Action is a great memory enhancer.

5. Relax.
• When we’re more relaxed, we absorb new information quicker and recall it with greater accuracy.


6. Create pictures.
• Relationships within and among abstract concepts can be “seen” and recalled
easily when they are visualized.

7. Recite and repeat.
• When you repeat something out loud, you anchor the concept in two different senses.
First, you’re saying it, and secondly, you’re hearing it.

8. Write it down.
• Writing a note to yourself helps you remember an idea, even if you never look at the note again.
USE YOUR BRAIN

9. Reduce interference.
• Find a quiet place that is free from distraction.

10. Use daylight.
• Many people can concentrate better during the day.

11. Over learn.
• One way to fight mental fuzziness is to learn more than you intended.

12. Escape the short-term memory trap.
• Short-term memory can decay after a few minutes and it rarely lasts more than
several hours. A short review within minutes or hours of a study session can move material from short-term memory to long-term memory.

13. Distribute learning.
• You can get more done when you take regular breaks, and you can use them as
mini-rewards.
• When you are engrossed in a textbook and cannot put it down, when you are
consumed by an idea for a paper and cannot think of anything else—keep going.

14. Be aware of attitudes.
• All of us can forget information that contradicts our opinions.
• One way to befriend a self-defeating attitude about a subject is to relate it to
something you are interested in.
• We remember what we find interesting. If you think a subject is boring, remember, everything is related to everything else. Look for the connections.

15. Choose what not to store in memory.
• Decide what’s important to remember and what is not. Focus on the key elements of the concept.

16. Combine memory techniques.
• All of these memory techniques work even better in combination with each other.
RECALL IT

17. Remember something else.
• When you are stuck and can’t remember something you know you know,
remember something else that is related to it.
• Information is stored in the same area of the brain as similar information.
Your can unblock your recall by stimulating that area of your memory.
• A brainstorming session is a good memory jogger.

18. Notice when you do remember.
• To develop your memory, notice when you recall information easily and ask yourself what memory techniques you’re using naturally.

19. Use it before you lose it.
• Even information stored in long-term memory becomes difficult to recall
if we don’t use it regularly.
• Read it, write it, speak it, listen to it, apply it—find some way to make contact
with the information regularly.

20. And, remember, you never forgot.
• Adopt the attitude that says: “I never forget anything. I may have difficulty recalling something from my memory, but I never really forget it. All I have to do is find where I stored it.”
• You can say “I don’t recall it right now”—not “I don’t remember.”

2007-02-15 18:58:40 · answer #6 · answered by spirit 3 · 0 0

it won't be possible by getting tips from other you can concentrate on your study better go and study in garden

2007-02-14 22:25:28 · answer #7 · answered by gotya 2 · 0 0

eat one choclate before studying and study in early morning and it is the good answer and it is syntifically proved by eating sweet concentration becomes powerful

2007-02-14 22:10:17 · answer #8 · answered by kejriwal jay 2 · 0 0

1. Switch off the TV
2. add more Glucon D in half cup of water and drink it
3. Do yoga

Then make your study room calm

2007-02-14 22:05:55 · answer #9 · answered by JJ 4 · 0 0

i advise u to meditate for 5-10 minutes in the morning.

paranayama(breathing) exersises also helps a lot.

afcourse, reading loudly also helps to keep other thoughts away

try them
all the best

2007-02-14 22:36:12 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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