What you think about when learning.
What is the most important factor in learning?
1 hour in class to 2 hours of study time.
What is the rule-of-thumb ratio for a successful semester?
The process of repeating information to store it in your long-term memory.
What is repetition?
Set of values and principles different from High School
What is College Culture?
The byproduct of overcoming setbacks.
What is happiness?
Learning is fast, Knowledge is Isolated facts, being good at multitasking, and being good at a subject is an inborn talent.
What are beliefs that make you stupid?
The M in SMARTER strategy for setting long-term goals.
What is Measurable?
Processing information for a greater understanding.
What is Comprehension?
Cheating and Plagiarism.
What are examples of poor academic integrity?
Not the end but a learning experience.
What is failure?
Learning meaningless aspects of information.
What is Shallow Processing?
The process of organizing tasks in order of urgency.
What are priorities?
A professor's rights to their material.
What are intellectual copyrights?
A document outlining the semester expectations.
What is a syllabus?
Motivation that stems from inside of you and shows on the surface.
What is intrinsic motivation?
Your understanding of how you learn.
What is Metacognition?
The first element in Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
What are basic physiological needs?
Mind maps, graphs, and flashcards
What are visual notes?
The science of how we think.
What is cognitive psychology?
The belief in your ability to meet a goal.
What is self-efficacy?
The process of expanding and relating information to previously learned information.
What is elaboration?
The smaller steps needed to take to achieve long-term goals.
What are Intermediary Goals?
Learning through repeated experience and exposure to a concept.
What is Recursive Learning?
Your most valuable asset.
What is your Instructor?
Expectations plus effort equals the desired outcome.
What is the expectancy theory?