I didn’t. I learned the rule when I was left to my own devices and began to fail because nobody was prodding me (ie in university, fresh out of high school).
I think failing personally (rather than watching other people fail) is a far more powerful motivator.
Really? University was terrible for my work habits. I was used to having a constant stream of projects and assignments, and all of a sudden it was just midterms and finals. I went to all my anatomy classes and studied maybe a few hours total and pulled off an A+. Which was awesome, but now I expect school to be like that and I feel resentful when they give us assignments that actually need to be worked on outside of class.
(The fact that my academic courses in first year were all related to biology, the area where I had the most general knowledge already, made it a lot easier. In, say, physics, I would have had to study very hard for an A+).
studied maybe a few hours total and pulled off an A+
Yep—I did that at fist too. Mainly because I began in Maths—which I was really good at… that led to me getting lax and assuming that I didn’t have to do any work at all… Generally I found I got 90-100% in the subjects I was interested in… and barely scraped through on the ones I didn’t like… eventually I failed one—one that I knew was easy enough that I should have aced.
That woke me up and I started to try to change my habits… but because I’d basically been slacking for over a year by then—I was so out of the habit of actually working that I also resented it. I also didn’t have deadlines (except the mid-term/final one), and was living away from home—and there are SO MANY DISTRACTIONS at university… so it was a hard slog to learn to actually work. :P
I didn’t. I learned the rule when I was left to my own devices and began to fail because nobody was prodding me (ie in university, fresh out of high school).
I think failing personally (rather than watching other people fail) is a far more powerful motivator.
Really? University was terrible for my work habits. I was used to having a constant stream of projects and assignments, and all of a sudden it was just midterms and finals. I went to all my anatomy classes and studied maybe a few hours total and pulled off an A+. Which was awesome, but now I expect school to be like that and I feel resentful when they give us assignments that actually need to be worked on outside of class.
(The fact that my academic courses in first year were all related to biology, the area where I had the most general knowledge already, made it a lot easier. In, say, physics, I would have had to study very hard for an A+).
Yep—I did that at fist too. Mainly because I began in Maths—which I was really good at… that led to me getting lax and assuming that I didn’t have to do any work at all… Generally I found I got 90-100% in the subjects I was interested in… and barely scraped through on the ones I didn’t like… eventually I failed one—one that I knew was easy enough that I should have aced.
That woke me up and I started to try to change my habits… but because I’d basically been slacking for over a year by then—I was so out of the habit of actually working that I also resented it. I also didn’t have deadlines (except the mid-term/final one), and was living away from home—and there are SO MANY DISTRACTIONS at university… so it was a hard slog to learn to actually work. :P
But eventually I did…