TIME MANAGEMENT

 

There is no one ideal way to organize the hours of a day, a week, a month, a year; however, you do have to decide on your priorities so that you can successfully achieve your various goals.

 

The best way to start this is to organize your time wisely. To do so, start by understanding that effective time management depends on acknowledging and respecting the need for balance and variety in your life and on realistically assessing the time you will need to complete a specific task or a long-term goal.

 

Let's begin by examining the causes of  INEFFECTIVE time management. Here's a list

  • Failure to set aside a reasonable amount of time for a specific task

  • Miscalculation or unrealistic assessment of how long the task will take

  • Failure to set aside a comfortable, well-organized space in which to complete the task

  • Assumption of an unrealistic workload

  • Failure to prioritize, streamline, and delegate tasks

  • Failure to eat, sleep, and exercise properly

  • Failure to re-define and adjust goals during periods of transition

  • Failure to clarify goals and priorities

  • Tendency to put off unpleasant or difficult tasks

 

Now, let's see what we can do to build EFFECTIVE time management skills:

  1. Start by recording and analyzing your current activities.

  2. Use a blank calendar or appointment book with the days of the week across the top of the page and the hours of the day in the left-hand column.

  3. Start your schedule with the time you wake up in the morning, and end with the time you go to sleep at night.

  4. Include your regular mealtimes.

  5. Note the times of your regular meetings, appointments, and classes.

  6. Observe and record your life hour by hour

  7. Note  the exact time of each day when you move from one activity to another ( e.g. reviewing your history lecture notes to writing up your biology lab experiment )

  8. If your activities overlap, see if you can consciously combine them.

  9. Note how long you spend on each activity.

  10. View and Re-view the Time Patterns of your Life

  11. As you review how you have spent each hour of the day during the past two weeks, ask yourself whether you have balanced your time well. Query yourself about how many hours of each day you have devoted to the four major life categories: health and personal maintenance, family, work, career and academic goals.

  12. Color in the block of time you devote to each category—blue for health and personal maintenance, green for family, red for work, and yellow for academic and career goals.

  13.  Within each category, identify specific activities that you have outgrown or that are no longer necessary.

  14. Identify activities to which you are devoting too much time.

  15. Adjust your Current Calendar to your Ideal Calendar

  16. Review primary and supporting strategies

  17. If you have too little time devoted to any one life category, build more time into that portion of your calendar.

  18. After you have reviewed the time allotted to routine activities, figure out how many hours remain to achieve the goals you have defined for yourself (e.g. a new exercise regimen or development of your research skills).

  19. Within each activity zone (work, family, health, career goals), create more specific, limited time zones (e.g. one hour on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons to familiarize yourself with reference materials in the library).

  20. To insure that you are strong enough to complete all the activities that support your goals, schedule enough time to sleep, exercise, cook, eat, and amuse yourself.

EXERCISE: What is Helping me to Achieve My Goals and what is not

 

Directions: Complete the following sentences by filling in the blanks:

  1. My goals are well defined when it comes to ________________________________________________________

     

  2. I am pretty clear about how long it takes me to______________________________________________________

     

  3. I never procrastinate about_____________________________________________________________________

     

  4. I am never late for____________________________________________________________________________

     

  5. I have no problem tackling difficult projects when_____________________________________________________

     

  6. Meeting deadlines is easiest for me______________________________________________________________

     

  7. I never have time to___________________________________________________________________________

     

  8. I spend way too much time on __________________________________________________________________

     

  9. I do not have well defined goals for_______________________________________________________________

     

  10. I always underestimate how long it takes to_________________________________________________________

     

  11. I procrastinate whenever I have to _______________________________________________________________

     

  12. I am usually late for __________________________________________________________________________

     

  13. I have a hard time finishing_____________________________________________________________________

 

SELF-ASSESSMENT QUIZ: FINDING YOUR TIME MANAGEMENT PREFERENCES

 

Ten Questions to Ask about how I Work Best:

  1. Do I work best independently or collaboratively?

  2. Do I concentrate best in short bursts or for long stretches of time?

  3. Do I focus best on one thing at a time or on several things?

  4. Do I work best with a fast, busy schedule or a slow, easy one?

  5. Do I prefer plans and predictability or surprises and spontaneity?

  6. Do I work best with tight deadlines or long lead times?

  7. Do I tend to “stew” about things or make quick decisions?

  8. Do I work best in silence or with background noise or music?

  9. Do I prefer to complete one long, complex task or a series of simple ones?

  10. Do I prefer to visualize a task or to think about it?

 

 PRINCIPLES of ACADEMIC TIME MANAGEMENT

 

Ten Tips for Getting the Semester off to a Good Start

  1. Arrive on time for your first class.

  2. Purchase textbooks before the first class of the semester if possible , but no later than the second meeting.

  3. Read carefully and annotate your syllabus, noting questions and comments.

  4. Ask your instructor to explain any course policies, procedures, or requirements that you do not understand.

  5. Note all due dates of major projects; enter these in your calendar or week-at-a-glance book.

  6. After you have ascertained which assignments are due when, create a daily timeline for each of your assignments. First write down your work and family responsibilities, then schedule your study times. Be sure and leave time for rest and nutrition.

  7. In consultation with your instructor and tutor, create a timeline for each of your major projects. Some instructors distribute prompts during the first two weeks. Read the prompts carefully as soon as possible after you receive them, underlining and annotating. Brainstorm with a friend or family member, or simply pose a series of questions to yourself. Take at least ten minutes to note in list format whatever ideas, images, memories, questions, or opinions immediately occur to you. Then bring your prompt and notes to discuss with your instructor during office hours.

  8. Establish disciplined study habits early by completing reading or other homework assignments on time beginning with the first week of class.

  9. Institute a filing system to organize prompts and other handouts as well as materials for essays-in-progress, returned assignments, and lecture notes.

  10. Exchange your phone number and e-mail address with at least one other student in each of your classes.

                 .

TIPS for SCHEDULING a MAJOR ACADEMIC PROJECT

 

Week I

Mon-Tues: Read carefully and analytically the prompt or assignment sheet distributed by your instructor. Underline key points, especially all direction words. Annotate in the margins, posing queries and briefly noting your opinions and responses.

Wed-Thurs: Meet with your instructor to go over the prompt; this is the time to resolve any confusion you feel about the assignment. Now is also a good time to go over the prompt with a tutor. Before you meet with your instructor, you might want to jot down ideas for developing the topic assigned.

Fri-Sat-Sun: Devote the first weekend of the four week period to Pre-writing or generating ideas and material for your project. Use the pre-writing techniques you were taught in your composition courses—jot listing, mind mapping, asking questions, brainstorming, interviewing and outlining. At the end of the weekend, review all your pre-writing materials and note repeated ideas or images. See if any patterns begin to emerge.

 

Week 2

Mon-Sun: Devote all of week 2 to researching your project in libraries over the Internet. At the end of the week, go back over the evidence you have gathered, sifting and organizing it.

 

Week 3

Mon-Tues: Formulate a tentative thesis that reflects both your own point of view on the topic and the evidence that has emerged in your research.

Wed-Sun: Start drafting your paper.

 

Week 4

Mon-Tues: Get feedback on your first draft from the instructor, tutors, fellow class members. Then read the draft yourself, first reading rapidly to gain an overall impression of what you have written, then reading a second and third time more slowly to ascertain how well you have organized your points, used evidence, and given supporting reasons.

Wed-Thurs: Revise your essay.

Thurs-Fri: Having “globally” revised your essay, now you must revise the smaller units of your essay (sentences, words, spelling, and punctuation). The day before the project is due proofread for typing/printing errors. Arrange the paper in the appropriate presentational mode.

 

MAXIMIZING YOUR TIME AND WRITING EFFECTIVE PAPERS

 

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

 

Receive assignment in class & ask the instructor questions in class

Begin peer                   brainstorming.

Ask instructor more questions if I get stuck

Organize ideas. Use mind maps, clusters, free writes & journals. Have outline completed

Develop a thesis statement & draft a tentative intro

Write a complete draft & begin the revision process

Set Draft Aside

 

Work on other classes

 

Spend time on self

Re-read draft & make Global/ “Big Picture” Changes (Cutting; Expanding;                   Re-formulating thesis; Re-arranging Paragraphs

Peer Edit Draft and see a tutor

 

Submit draft to Instructor for feedback

Work on Assignments for Other Classes

                        Take Some Time off:

Receive Draft Back from Instructor &  ask about comments

                         Re-read comments and Peer Editing Suggestions

Re-read your Draft

                         Make a List of final changes

Make additions, deletions and revisions to final draft

                       

 

Put Draft Aside

Take Some Time to Renew Spirit & Body

Edit Final Draft for grammar, punctuation & spelling. Proofread for surface errors too

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Use both monthly and weekly calendars to plan or map your projects. Consider using a monthly calendar like the one below to map out writing assignments

Use your calendar to break down tasks and pace your project’s progress.

Add reminders to yourself to make time to speak with your instructor or a tutor and to meet with peers, so you can maintain your pace without getting boggled down with questions or concepts that you need clarification and so you can obtain useful feedback about your work.

 

 

Find “Free” Time or Your Best Times to Study

Find time to work on projects & to study by mapping out your weekly schedule and identifying your “free” time. Start by accounting for all the time that you are awake and see where you have blocks of “free” time.

 

 

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

8:00am-3:00pm

Work

Work

Work

Work

Work

Work

Work

4:00pm-5:15 pm

FREE

ENG

PSY

ENG

PSY

 

 

5:30pm-6:45 pm

Time

HIST

Math

HIST

Math

 

 

7:00pm-11:00 pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fill in your “free” time with homework assignments and projects

  • Mon./7:00-9:15: Read chapters 1-5, One Hundred Years of Solitude

  • Tues./7:00-9:15: Read and annotate two articles for psychology

  • Tues./9:15-11:15: Complete Math Problems

  • Wed./7:15-9:15: Meet with Other Students for History Group Project

  • Wed./9:15-11:15: Review Notes and Assignments for Group Project

  • Thurs./7:15-9:15: Read Ch. 15 of Psychology text

  • Fri./ 4-5:15: Do pre-writing (Invention) for English essay

  • Sat./9-2: Work on first draft, English essay

  • Sun./ 11-4: Work on English draft

 

EXERCISE: NOW MAKE YOUR OWN CALENDAR:

  1. Fill in work hours

  2. Fill in family responsibility times

  3. Fill in class meeting times

  4. Designate remaining spaces as “free time”

  5. Fill in “free time” slots with specific tasks 

 

 

Daily Schedule:

 

 

Time

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

8:00am-9:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9:00-10:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10:00-11:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11:00-12:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12:00pm-1:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1:00-2:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2:00-3:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3:00-4:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4:00-5:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5:00-6:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6:00-7:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7:00-8:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8:00-9:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9:00-10:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10:00-11:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11:00pm-12:00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now create a Homework/Project Schedule by listing what you need to work on during your free time. Remember to leave room for some time for yourself.

 

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information provided for CLASS by Ann Marie Ross, ECLP Faculty Associate

Revised and updated by Peggy Ozaki, spring 2007