The best way to access the file is NOT to open it directly (you may receive error messages from the pdf format). Right click on the links below, select 'Save Target As' and save the file on your computer. Then go to where you saved the file and double-click on it to open it.
Click on the links below to download a condensed version of the information for the following recent seminar. (it can take awhile to download depending on the speed of your connection). If you have any problems just fill in the form on the side with your details (ie school, year level and when the session was) and I will email you the info. These files will be available for approximately 3 weeks from the date of the seminar.
Most files are in PDF format. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer to open these files (it is a free downloadable program available at http://www.adobe.com/au/). If the files appear as gobbledygook, your computer probably doesn't have the reader installed or is using an old version.
All slides in these presentations are copyrighted to Enhanced Learning Educational Services. Attendees of the seminar may view the slides for their own use but the presentation is not to be used in any other way, presented by any other person other than an ELES consultant or copied or given to other persons. It is not to be included in any other handouts etc. without ELES permission and acknowledgement that it is the intellectual property of Enhanced Learning Educational Services.
Term Planner Week Planner Action Plan Music ExamPrepGrid DIARY
6/11 Waverley College Year 11/12: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
23/9 Braidwood Central School Years 10-12: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
19/8 Fairvale High Year 12: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
13/8 Waverley College Years 7/8: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
12/8 Galston High Year 9: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
7/8 SCEGGS Year 7: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
31/7 St Aloysius Year 7: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
30/7 SCEGGS Years 8/9: SLIDES FOLLOW-UP
Questions or comments? Email us at info@enhanced-learning.net
Click here: 'Preparing for High School' for more information about this resource.
Generally we work with schools directly but we can do individual or small group work for high school students in Australia upon request although we do not actively promote this service. The price of a 75 minute session is $385 (incl. GST) which is the minimum charge for presenter's time for an hour session at schools. Some parents have requested a 'one-off' session to work individually with their student to help them organise themselves specifically and learn how to summarise or study more effectively. If you wish to share the costs within a group, the maximum size for a small group session is 5 students. Call 0416 293 087 if you are interested but please note, there is limited availability for these sessions. You may also like to call us to request an information pack about the sessions that we offer at schools - some parents have found that when they pass this information onto their student's Year Coordinator at school, the school will then organise a session for the Year Group - a much more economical way for your student to learn these techniques.
(Note: If you know of any person/organisation that does one-on-one sessions we would be happy to pass on details to other parents as we always have more parents looking for this type of support than we can address. Just email us the details at the email address above - so far we do not know of any other contacts to pass on).
Not really. ELES specialises in helping high school students develop their study skills. Although we have done a few...
"Many thanks for your excellent session yesterday. Feedback from the team was really positive and I've seen a few of them getting organised this morning!" Managing Director, ecareer.
Motivation
In the Classroom
Getting Organised
Managing Workload
Preparing for Examinations
Making Effective Study Notes
Studying for Examinations
Examination Techniques
Managing Stress
Post Examination Evaluation
Motivating your students can be hard going. There are two arguments you can present to them to encourage them to use their time at school wisely.
KEEP DOORS OPEN
Most students do not know what sort of a career they want to pursue when they leave school. By working to the best of their ability, they keep as many doors or paths open as possible. Slacking off now can mean limited choices later on. Career counsellors or aptitude tests can be useful in giving some direction.
DEVELOP HABITS OF SUCCESS
If your student has a bad habit (like biting their nails) they have probably struggled to break this habit. Poor study habits and work ethics are the same – difficult to break later on. Things that teachers and schools put up with will not be tolerated in the workplace. Developing habits of success can make life easier.
For many students though, the future can seem a long way away and a bit irrelevant. For these types of students, the carrot and the stick are the main motivators. Try and find ways to reward your students for positive behaviours rather than punishing them for negative ones. Make the goals small and manageable, and keep the rewards small too or you will set higher and higher standards for the type of reward needed for motivation.
A fabulous book written by an educational psychologist is 'How to Motivate Your Child for school and beyond' by Andrew Martin. It has lots of great strategies and insights and suggestions. A must read for any parent who is looking for ways to motivate their student.
Students need to Listen, Participate, Concentrate – make it active!!!
Retention: 10% if just listen, 40% if take notes, and 90% if actively take notes and participate.
Parents need to know what is happening in the classroom and work together with students and teachers to improve and to make class time more efficient. Ask for the plain unvarnished truth at parent teacher interviews! Get specific. Do they talk in the lesson? Do they listen to instructions? How much of the lesson are they on task for? Do they use class time effectively? Call the teacher if you are unsure of how effective your student is in the classroom. It may be necessary to ask for a change of seats to ensure students use class time well. Students will not take the initiative to sit next to someone else and it can be difficult for a teacher to justify moving a student. A parent asking for a change could be the excuse they have been looking for. If there are particular subjects of concern, ask your student’s teacher to record how on track they have been in that lesson in their diary. If they really are not improving, ask the school for some sort of progress card that the teacher signs off each lesson indicating how well they worked that lesson.
On a regular basis, maybe twice a term, arrange a time with your student for them to sit down with you and show you their folders or exercise books. It is a good exercise to see if they can clearly explain the work they have covered so far. Each subject should have a folder at home with a contents page at the front listing the topics covered so far. Topics should be separated by dividers. All work in each topic should be sorted into the things to learn at the front of that section (ie notes or handouts) and the things to practice at the back (ie tests, assignments, worksheets etc). Your students should be able to show you a clear progression of each of the topics they have covered so far this year. If their work is very disorganised, help them sort everything into topics and label things clearly. Help them do a contents page. Another strategy is to ask the teacher to send you a copy of the list of topics they will be covering in class that term. You can then use this list to help your student organise their notes. You may like to have your student ask a friend if they could borrow their notes for an evening and you could sit with your student to use these notes as a guide as to what should be in their folders or books.
Student Steps for Getting Organised
Encourage your students to plan out their work, break it down into pieces and allocate the work over a period of time. They should write into their diaries when they plan on doing these steps. If students are feeling overwhelmed, sit down together and get them to write out a list of absolutely everything they need to get done. Help them prioritise these and draw up a grid of the next few weeks. Help them slot the pieces of work into the available time.
Some good homework practices:
Students NEVER have no work to do:
Four weeks before exams – encourage students to find out topics etc to be included in exams.
Check if students have their notes organised and summaries made, and find out if they have any work missing. Preferably this should also happen about a month before the exams.
Help students draw up a grid of the time before the exam and plan out what work they will do to prepare. Or get them to do one and give it to you for suggestions.
Remind your students to do the following a month or so before:
DO A PLAN!
Draw up a timetable of the available time left to study
Use the grid to plan out when they are going to DO each piece of preparation.
6. MAKING EFFECTIVE SUMMARIES / STUDY NOTES
Ideally, students should make or at least start study notes for their subjects each time they finish a topic. This way they are reviewing their work as they go, and when they get to examination time it is not such a huge task to undertake. Some features of good summaries are as follows:
Some ammunition for you with your student to use about summaries!
Why Make Summaries?
Every time you start a summary you are actually studying as you have to think about how the topic is arranged, what it means and the best way to make it clear rather than just copying out notes. It improves concentration and memory and is a selective process helping you gain the main ideas and facts. It helps you translate information into terms that are meaningful for you. The mind flinches from scrappy data. The better you organise your notes into groups and sub-groups of connected ideas the better you will be able to learn them. It gives you a fantastic time advantage closer to the exams if your notes are well organised and you can start studying straight away.
How Do You Make Summaries?
Go through all the resources you have to make sure your summary includes everything you should know. This helps you work out what you do and don’t understand. Write things in a logical order and only have the minimum number of important words to read through, no lengthy sentences. This eliminates excessive notetaking by forcing the use of key words or phrases rather than sentences. It must be easy to read and well organised. Mind mapping is a method you can use for visualising information in a kind of map or diagram. It gives you an overview of a large amount of information. By organising the information clearly and logically it focuses attention on essential information and helps establish the link between all supporting points. The organisation, neatness and legibility of the notes made is very important to help support the brain in making and retaining patterns for memory. Use highlighting, colour, headings, boxes, bullet points to help your memory retain information.
Students need to both LEARN and PRACTISE for exams.
LEARN Parents can be of great help in making students learning of material more active by testing students or helping them with flashcards or having students verbally explain or talk about a particular topic. Learning styles are also important. Students should try to access different learning styles in the way they study (visual, auditory, kinesthetic) but they should also play to their strengths. If students are not happy with their results, the results will not change unless they change the way in which they study. The main thing to avoid is just sitting still and reading. Students should always have a pen in their hand and be highlighting, making notes on what they have read or reading then writing down in their own words what they can remember.
LEARN
Parents can suggest to students to:
PRACTISE
Although parents can’t help much with the practise side of things, they can ensure students have all the resources they need. There are great study guides available for most subjects which can give students an extra source of questions to practise from. Prior to examinations, encourage students to ask their teachers for past papers to use for study.
PRACTISING
Some additional points:
EXAMINATION TECHNIQUES
Ask your student if they’d like to spend 5 minutes or so talking about examination techniques and what they need to focus on in the exam. Give your students a quiz on the following. For example you could ask them "What should you do the morning of the exam?"
The morning of the exam ensure you have had a decent breakfast and you arrive well on time with correct equipment.
At the start of the exam read through all instructions / criteria and look through the whole paper taking note of choices. Remember your strengths and plan your attack. Some students like to jot down points for all their plans first.
You can memory dump formulas or things you think you might forget, but don’t spend too long doing this.
Which questions first? Depends on your style. Play to your strengths and do the questions that will help you build confidence and momentum. Some recommend leaving the multiple choice till last – ask your teacher what is best in their subject.
The marks are an important guideline for the depth of response required by the examiner. Don’t just write everything you know – answer the question!
Avoid liquid paper. It takes time, you may forget to go back, and even worse you might have been right!
Write neatly so examiners don’t waste time deciphering and then feel your work is disjointed.
Allocate and plan out your time before you start. Keep a watch in front of you at all times and don’t spend too long on just one question.
If you finish early, check and check again, especially the details. Attempt EVERY question – don’t leave anything out.
If you have a mental blank, leave it and come back : let your subconscious work on it. Stay hydrated though, dehydration causes massive reduction in short term memory.
Common Mistakes:
QUALITY SLEEP: destress, remove negative thoughts
EXERCISE: burn off stress hormones
HEALTHY FOOD: avoid caffeine and sugar
MANAGING EXAMS: be thoroughly prepared, plan study time.
Active Strategies for Students
Mental Strategies for Students
10. POST EXAMINATION EVALUATION
Ensure you get to see every examination paper. Make time with your student to sit down and discuss the paper together. Ask them what they did well and what they answered well. Ask them what they didn’t know and need to improve on next time. What did they find hard? Did they do enough revision? Should they redo and resubmit any particular questions? Do they need to add anything to their summary notes? What did they learn from the experience. It certainly doesn’t hurt to call your student’s teacher and have a quiet chat about the exam and their performance. This way you can get some further feedback about what they need to do to improve.