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Weekly Planner: Study Skills

This document provides guidance on using a weekly planner to manage your time as a student. It recommends blocking out times for lectures, tutorials, previews, reviews, as well as other commitments like work, meals, family and social activities. Students should also block out specific times for each subject to study, allowing around 10 hours per week per unit. The planner should be completed at the start of each week since commitments may vary. In addition to a weekly planner, students need a trimester planner for assignment deadlines and exam dates, as well as daily lists of specific tasks to stay organized and on track.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
171 views2 pages

Weekly Planner: Study Skills

This document provides guidance on using a weekly planner to manage your time as a student. It recommends blocking out times for lectures, tutorials, previews, reviews, as well as other commitments like work, meals, family and social activities. Students should also block out specific times for each subject to study, allowing around 10 hours per week per unit. The planner should be completed at the start of each week since commitments may vary. In addition to a weekly planner, students need a trimester planner for assignment deadlines and exam dates, as well as daily lists of specific tasks to stay organized and on track.

Uploaded by

sile15
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WEEKLY PLANNER

Mon Tue Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun

7-8

8-9

9-10

10-11

11-12

12-1

1-2

2-3

3-4

4-5

5-6

6-7

7-8

8-9

9-10

deakin.edu.au/studyskills

Study Skills Supporting Academic Success


WEEKLY PLANNER

Using a weekly planner to manage your time


On the weekly planner enter:
scheduled lectures, tutorials, seminars etc.
an hour for preview and an hour for review for each one of these university commitments (ideally these should be
scheduled immediately before and immediately after lectures, tutorials and the like).

If your scheduled lectures, tutorials, seminars etc. remain the same for a number of weeks, photocopy your planner (make a
number of copies!) before adding anything else.

Then, at the start of each week, add:


paid work obligations
meal times
sporting/recreational commitments
online time
family commitments
social events
me time.

There should be some white squares left! What are you going to do with them?

Firstly, you have to decide how many hours you need per area of study and block them in! Remember, some weeks you may
have a commitment all day Sunday and so are unable to allow any study time; in other weeks you might nominate Sunday to
be full of study commitments thats why you complete a new planner each week.

How much study time should you allow per unit?

It is generally recommended you allow 10 hours per unit per week which includes lecture and tutorial time. However
some areas of study require more than this.

If you havent got enough time for everything then prioritising what you need to do is the key.

Weekly planners are just one way of organising your time effectively you also need a trimester planner for entering exam
dates and assignment deadlines to give you an overview of the months ahead.

A daily list is needed too what exactly do you intend to do in that two hours you blocked in on your weekly planner for
example?

Remember to be specific with your list:


read McDonald chapters 3&4 (NOT do reading!)
analyse assignment question 2 & make a draft plan (NOT start assignment!)
deakin.edu.au/studyskills

Study Skills Supporting Academic Success

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