Student Coaching for Success
Traits of a Successful Person
Success comes from a goal, a plan,
strategic activity, action divided into
tasks, evaluation and a positive
attitude. Embodied in all these
features is persistence.
Successful people possess these
specific traits. These traits appear
within their life and are features of
their work-style and productivity.
These personal traits are imperatives.
The rest of it will be learned, developed
and absorbed from the process of
education.
The progressive climb within academia
provides the student with the goal.
However, the goal must matter and
the effort must be diligent.
Skills, knowledge and abilities come
from methodologies used to learn.
The successful person is positive,
enthusiastic and willing to risk failure to
achieve success.
There is no substitute for character.
Short term effort for long term success is
a very fair exchange.
The educational goal you seek is of this
order of challenge.
Embrace the challenge and persist.
Purpose of your life
Achievers understand the purpose of their life.
Synchronizing your goal, your desire, your
talents is easier if you can describe your purpose.
Even, if all you pursue is material success,
encapsulating all your energies in pursuit of that
gains momentum from purpose.
Know your purpose, be it altruistic or self-centered.
The higher your purpose, the clearer your goals.
Zen of living a successful life
Identify what is most important in your life.
List the top 3-4 things, but list everything that
is important even if the list is ten or twenty items
long.
What is essential?
Important items are not necessarily essential. Essential is what you must have control of for you to succeed. Essential is what you must manage.
Suddenly, important is not as mportant as those essentials. Now your list should be led by the 3-4 most essential items.
Know where your time is spent.
Time is your life in known increments. List all the hours and minutes you spend. Observe how you use your life in increments.
Keep what is valuable to you.
Let go of the things that populate your life, but are not essential, things that have no value to your progress, that use your energy and time.
Keep what nurtures your progress, development and journey to success. Everything else hinders you.
Simplify:
Understand the process of simplifying.
Do one thing at a time.
Do essential things first.
Each day you will be eliminating, more easily, the unimportant tasks and obstacles.
Clear out impediments:
Revoke social commitments that tie you down.
Reclaim time spent on things not on your essential list.
Close information streams like TV, web, email and chat.
Batch small tasks after your have done essential tasks.
Do things once per day, like emails, call-backs, errands.
Think, work, and live more efficiently.
Single-tasking:
A student studies—even a student focused on just one exam. Therefore, you must study to do well on your test. Study is what you must have at the top of your list of activities every day.
Block out the time, or sets of time, each day for study. Fit everything else around that block or sets of study time. Allow nothing to influence that task. Tunnel vision on the task of study will produce the successful result you desire.
Do it right now. Create your daily schedule with study time blocked out for study first—nothing should come before that each day. It may come late in a day, but block it for study every day until your test date. All else will fit in around that block of study time.
Shut off the world from your study time, your study place, and your study process. No phone, no text message, no emails, no interruptions. Bring food and drink to your study place.
 Taking Control of the Process
Setting Goals
Short term: pass this test with the score you need
Long term: graduate with the degree you want
Time management
Own your schedule, own the clock.
Be selfish with time, parsimonious with every quarter-hour of your day.
Time is now your most precious resource.
Don’t allow time-thieves near your treasure.
“—my life is so busy, how will I find the time?”
Begin inside out. Put the study time first, build the rest of your life around study time.
This is your life, and when it is successful, the people who need you now will be much better off also. So, demand their cooperation.
Explain how your success works for them.
This is a short term goal necessity. Insist on it.
You cannot afford their lack of cooperation.
Own your time. Do not share it. Essential time is your most precious possession on this journey.
Finances
You have to survive; you have to pay bills.
And, you have to prepare for this test.
Accumulate the funds for this test and invest it in the best purchase that will prepare you to reach the level you need.
TestCircle’s cost comparison shows real value.
Not only very inexpensive, it often comes with discount coupons.
Identifying Resources
Mentors, family members, teachers who have encouraged you, employers, truly good friends, those who really show you love--these human resources are invaluable. Collect and protect them. Reward them with your best effort.
Information, lessons, exercises, practice tests, support, a virtual classroom, portability, epeatability, tips, tricks, tactics and techniques, vocabulary vaults and glossary resources are what you need to have in your studies. TestCircle packages all of these for one price. Evaluate this academic resource.
Intelligent Use of Resources
Get help, get support early. Don’t hesitate. Work the entire trove of resources. Don’t over-estimate yourself or underestimate the challenge. Allow ample test preparation time.
Skills for Problem-Solving
Breaking down complex to singular tasks, isolating facts and being accurate, and proving answers are skills which must be acquired.
Calm, simplification, patience and flexibility are key to problem-solving in everyday challenges and also needed for analysis and solution of test questions.
Control of Environment
Wherever you are studying or going to study, you must be the master, in control, not reliant on the ooperation of others. If that area is in your home, you must have solitude.
You need a sanctuary of quiet.
Libraries are wonderful. Headsets help isolate you. An office, empty before hours or after hours, is often excellent.
Distractions
External:
There are external distractions that come with life.
Avoiding them is crucial to a successful person.
Distractions are usually there in your life every day
—people, routes of transportation, lines of communication, lack of assets, your living place, health issues, discomfort in your study area.
Knowing them, listing them will lead you to act to mitigate them. Do not ignore the cause of the distraction. Act to avoid, evade, terminate or redirect these distractions.
Internal:
Internal distractions are all about you—boredom, fear, hunger, worry, energy and focus levels.
These psychological impediments clear out when you take charge of all the external factors and begin a process of self-management.
Accurate Self-estimate
Setting goals:
You must have a plan to reach a goal.
Do you make reliable plans to reach realistic goals?
Priorities:
Priorities are must-do items in logical sequence, not the easiest or most pleasant first, but
the most essential first.
Known obstacles:
People, places, things.
People who don’t get your goals,
who don’t cooperate easily,
hinder your progress.
Places that disrupt you, that
distract you, limit you.
Things that interrupt, distract,
diminish you. Phones, slow or unreliable
internet connections, loud noise,
nearby foot traffic are such things.
Commuter transportation is the
biggest time-waster in modern life.
It drains time, money, life force each day.
Time is Gold:
Use of time is a skill to be treasured, and
a treasure to acquire. Work at the skill of
time management. It does not come easily,
but it will be worth the effort.
A daily calendar with the hours listed enables
tasks to fit a schedule. Study being the first
and most essential thing to achieve success
on your daily schedule and managing all the
other most essential things coming after, you
have the beginning of a skill that will repay
you with great rewards.
Persistence:
Even if you are deficient in all of the above,
persistence will carry you to your goal. Never
quit, never give up or give in, and you will
succeed.
Frequent self-examination:
Measure your progress at least weekly, if
not daily. Without examining how far you have
traveled, or how well you have done on the
continuum of your life, you might find yourself
off-course too late or miss the opportunities
to reward yourself for milestones along the way.
Correct behavior:
Repay favors, thank benefactors,
share generously, assist others,
work diligently. Karma is the currency of life.
Tough exterior shell:
You have an inner gyro to keep
you on course. Do not allow anyone
to re-direct or miss-direct you.
Be self-protective like a turtle.
Smile at the naysayers, the doubters.
Success is the best payback. That inner
gyro, your will to succeed, will keep you
moving forward.
 Passing a Test/Exam Stress Free
Motivation:
Stay in touch with your goal, then your
stress will dissipate. Your short term goal
is fuel for your actions. Keep your goal
readily available; post a visible, daily
reminder of it everywhere.
Goal:
A goal must be an object of passion.
If you have a goal that does not excite you,
you may not reach it.
The excitement of, the anticipation of,
the attraction of a goal is what ignites action.
Action:
Just do it is good advice.
Focus on it.
Do it in sets.
Do it as exercises.
Do it repetitiously.
Once you have a goal and a plan, do it.
Action relieves stress.
Cognitive over feeling:
Your plan must be a product of cognition,
not emotion. While the stirring of your goal
ignites you, planning is cognitive.
Be calculating with your plans. Save the
emotion and feelings for self-motivation
and self-rewards.
Plans are the architecture of your life.
Facts are not feelings. Logic is not love.
Planning is not a sentient process.
It is a cognitive, rational process
 Organizing a Support Group
Family:
Your parents, your siblings, your spouse,
your grandparents are great support group
candidates. They all are family stakeholders
in your success. Involve them in your support.
They can sustain you, encourage you and
enable you to succeed.
Teachers, instructors:
Teachers who have encouraged you,
instructors who have guided you are
wonderful support group candidates.
Stay in active communication with them.
TestCircle support team:
Our mission is your success.
Our instructors and support staffers
will do whatever we can to support
your study efforts.
Financial stakeholders:
Parents, grandparents, scholarship and grant
organizations all want you to succeed. Keep them
informed of your progress and consult with them
for your long term goals.
External sources:
Employers are often a source of support.
Church groups, associations, unions, schools,
colleges, universities all function as empowering
organizations. Use them in your career.
 Centered Behavior for Success
Know your values:
How you identify yourself internally is very important
to your behavior on the journey to success. Knowing
your values and how they match up with your goals is
invaluable in the quest for success.
Talk to yourself correctly:
Encourage your basic values.
Positive vibes should come from you first.
A good job, a task done well, or little steps
taken add up to daily moments for self-encouragement
Be generous with yourself.
Put yourself first on all your schedules:
You must come first in your short term plans.
It is not selfish. It is strategic.
Later, you can adjust to others.
For now, short term, no one is more important than you.
You cannot wait in a cue.
You must stand first in line.
Pamper yourself psychologically:
Never belittle yourself.
Uplift your spirit with the conviction that
you are special and deserving, talented
and intelligent. Stay close to those who love
you unconditionally. Communicate with those
who are positive reinforcers.
Reward yourself for diligent work:
Create a reward system for small milestones.
And plan a nice reward for achieving your short
term goal. Diligent work deserves rewards.
 Study Skills
Environment for Study
The room you study in must accommodate
uninterrupted concentration.
Your ability to review, repeat and interact with
the study materials must be paramount.
An online computer course, with troves of videos
and vaults of answers and proofs for questions,
presenting copious explanations and exercises,
offers an ideal focus point for effective study.
Context
A course of study should be organized using effective
methodologies. Your needs should be met in the
interface, depth of material, clarity, rganization and
ease of access. Multisensory reception will enhance
your study results.
Memory
Memory is the mental ability to store, retain and
recall information, Three properties of memory are:
encoding information as it is received; storing
information in a permanent record and directory;
and retrieving or recalling, or recognizing the
information on some cue for use in some process
or activity.
Short term:
Short term memory means limited items in short
chunks, typically, three elements, and in groups
of 4-5.
Usually, acoustic information is better recalled than
visual data for short term memory.
Sensory memory is short term unless there are
repetitions of the experience.
Short term memory is dependent on the frontal lobe
and the parietal lobe. These are areas of transient
neuronal communication, which is less stable, less
permanent.
Long term:
Archived information in long term memory is retrievable
indefinitely because of how the information is processed
when received.
If the information is handled more, if repetitions are
processed, if organization into categories is more
extensive, then the information is retrievable indefinitely.
Qualities of information distinctiveness, and information
difficulty where effort is required, and information elaborateness are features of information that is held in long term
memory.
Information in long term memory is processed in the brain
at night during sleep and distributed across several areas
of the brain.
Improving memory:
Daily aerobic exercise and good sleep are essential to
good memory. The brain needs increased supply of
oxygen all day long and the body and mind need good
sleep to complete the process of permanent record
keeping by the brain. Eating more, but, smaller meals
and getting aerobic exercise outdoors are habits of
good memory maintenance.
Study Methods
Build a Study Guide:
(My Notebook helps you build your review notes)
TestCircle is enabling students with the ability
to build a study guide that is personal and fits
their own needs. Using My Notebook, a
feature exclusive to TestCircle courses, is a daily
study guide that will help you with a digital and a
print out potential.
SQ4R Method of Study:
The initials are linked to the process of this method.
S: Survey or preview the text material and develope
the meaning of the text
Q: Questions should generate from reading the text.
Note vocabulary that is new.
R1: Read the text with the purpose of finding the
answers to the questions.
R2: Write a summary of key terms and ideas.
R3: Recite your answers to your questions, even
write the answers.
R4: Review all your notes, discuss your view points,
Taking Notes:
Organize with a heading, subject, topic, title, number.
Identify Main points and ideas.
Reduce to key words that cue points and ideas; key
phrases, and key uestions
Use words and pictures to capture the points and ideas.
Make an outline or mind map of the material.
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Lesson-packed, four component approach
Example sets and Exercise sets
Over two months' study and drills
Sixteen Math topics
Illuminating each topic--a foundation of tutoring practice
English test masters provide text, questions and reasoning
Students drawn deeply into the authors' works
Exercises explain the point of view of writers
Principles of prose construction unfolded
Drills with audio explanations
Interactive Vocabulary module
Extensive word power prep
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