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Friday, October 26, 2007

Award Winning Books




Obayedzakanis delightful satires 'Obayedzakani's delightful satires
Illustrator - Mohammadali Baniasadi Adaptor - Shahraam Shafee'ee
An adaptation and retelling of humorous poems and anecdotes of the most celebrated Iranian satirist of the 15th-century A.D., 'Obayedzakani, written partly in prose and partly in the original poems.
Awards - Iran's Children's Book Council Award Persian / Farsi
1378 (Iranian Calendar)
2
Author - Mostafa Rahmandoust Illustrator - Hafez Miraftabi
This is the story of Abraham, who did not want to worship idols, and his conflict with Nimrod, king of the land of Nimrod.
Awards - BolognaRagazzi Award -- New Horizons (awarded to the series)-Selected title of the Bratislava Biennial of Illustrations-Exhibited title at the First Croatian Biennial of Illustration Persian / Farsi
1383 (Iranian Calendar)
3
Author - Ahmad Reza Ahmadi Illustrator - Sharareh Khosravani
Grandma was sick and coughed all the time so her grandson went to the store to get more medicine. Finding the store was harder than he thought since he couldn't understand the people he showed the ad...
Awards - Exhibited title at the First Croatian Biennial of Illustration Persian / Farsi
1384 (Iranian Calendar)
4
The adventure of Ahmad and the clock The adventure of Ahmad and the clock
Author - Feresteh Ta'erpoor Illustrator - Mehrnoush Ma'soumian
Ahmad, a pre-school boy, loves to go out hiking with his father. When they try to go earlier than planned, they get into trouble.
Awards - Iran's Children's Book Council Award-Creativity Award of the International Study Center of Literature for Young Adults in Paris Persian / Farsi
1365 (Iranian Calendar)
5
The adventurer The adventurer
Author - Vladimir Andrić Illustrators - Anri Ruso~Milorad Isailović~Dragan Inđiđ
The Adventurer is a very interesting and dear character, a friendly figure who leads the readers into his world of adventures, a world full of different and incredible situations...
Awards - The best book for children and youth-Politika's funny magazine-Marigold award Serbian
6
Aliou and Jean Aliou and Jean
Illustrator - L.E. Bassène
"With books, you can travel all over the world and meet all kinds of people", says 12-year-old Aliou. So, follow Aliou and his friends who live at the edge of the city like so many poor children all ...
Awards - Saint-Exupéry Prize -- Young value, special jury mention French
1990
7
All Love and four brothers All Love and four brothers
Author - Mostafa Rahmandoust Illustrator - Lisa Jamileh Barjesteh
The mistress of the house was jealous of her maid All Love, who was more well-loved than the mistress' own daughter, Happy Love. The mistress asked All Love to complete impossible tasks and threatened...
Awards - Selected title of the Bologna Illustrators Exhibition-Selected title of the Belgrade Biennial of Illustations-BolognaRagazzi Award -- New Horizons (awarded to the series) Persian / Farsi
1382 (Iranian Calendar)
8
All my foolishness All my foolishness
Author - Gradimir Stojković
Bogdanka called Boca and Bane are school friends. This is a story about their childhood, friendship and their love.
Awards - Marigold-Dositej's pen Serbian
2001
9
All we need are dragons All we need are dragons
Author - Ljubivoje Ršumović Illustrator - Dušan Petričić
Funny poems about fantastic dragons and other kites that are hard to resist.
Awards - The Golden Pen-Marigold award-International competition in Leipzig Serbian
1990
10
Almond blossoms Almond blossoms
Author - Parvin Doulataabaadi Illustrator - Mohammadali Baniasadi
A selection of 13 poems praising parents, nature, seasons and animals.
Awards - Iran's Children's Book Council Award Persian / Farsi
1368 (Iranian Calendar)
11
Ang alamat ng ampalaya = The legend of the bitter gourd Ang alamat ng ampalaya = The legend of the bitter gourd
Author - Augie D. Rivera, Jr. Illustrator - Kora D. Albano Translator - Ani Rosa S. Almario
Ampalaya was pale and bland. He was envious of the taste, color and beauty of other vegetables in Sariwa town. Because of his greediness, he stole the sweetness of Kalabasa, the sourness of Kamatis, t...
Awards - Best Fiction for Children - National Writers Workshop of the University of the Philippines English - Filipino / Tagalog
2003
12
An angel is born An angel is born
Illustrator - Neda Azimi
A little angel flew into chidren's dreams, but one night she flew into a couple's dream. She asked God to go to earth and watch the children during the day. The little angel knew that the coupled long...
Awards - Award winner of the Islamic Theological Sciences Center-Exhibited title at the First Croatian Biennial of Illustration

Featured books

* October 1, 2007
A clown, a star and some magic dogs with Julia
* September 6, 2007
Stories about growing up and sharing with Tennille Parker
* August 1, 2007
Stories about helping others and funny rhymes with Zhanfei
* June 15, 2007
Stories about a star, rabbit, and kitten with Joanne
* June 4, 2007
Stories from Africa
* April 30, 2007
Stories about quiltmaker, Singapore and Christmas with Shivani
* April 09, 2007
Books from South America
* March 26, 2007
Stories about Kapai, mommy and pencils with Amy Datsko
* February 26, 2007
Stories about alien, alphabet and Western Europe with Albert Ninepence
* February 12, 2007
Stories about 4 brothers, Egyptians and Judge Rabbit with Alana Naveena Yasmine Swartz
* January 17, 2007
Stories about Grandmas with Mandy DeMott
* January 2, 2007
Hunterman, Cravat and going back home with Akemi
* December 11, 2006
White Ravens books in the ICDL
* November 20, 2006
West-African folktale and two funny French books with Juliette
* November 11, 2006
History, quiltmaker and Jamaica with Sam and Stephen
* September 25, 2006
Two German books and angry Sophie with Daina Bolsteins
* September 11, 2006
Monsters and Cats with Dana Druin Bederson
* August 28, 2006
Gifts, duck and friends with Tim Daniel
* August 14, 2006
Green, green, green with Zhang Yuanhong
* July 31, 2006
Dragons, monsters, and poems with Pam Rogers
* July 17, 2006
Cats, dogs, and cranes with Christine Sartwell with Christine Sartwell
* July 03, 2006
Swahili books with Elizabeth Warrick
* June 19, 2006
Animal stories with Tanya and Jim Torres
* June 05, 2006
Cat stories with Katie George
* May 22, 2006
Rockets, trees, and presents with Michael Bonsignore
* May 8, 2006
Colorful illustrations with Jeanette Marin
* April 24, 2006
Jungles, French, and Zip the dog with Cathy Stoll
* April 10, 2006
Aliens, poems, and games with Casey Wilkinson
* March 27, 2006
Books to celebrate spring with Domi Long
* March 13, 2006
Books about helpful children with Julie Simon
* February 27, 2006
Cats, dogs, and a brand new room with Kim Ha
* February 3, 2006
Favorites from New Zealand with Lynne Jackett
* December 19, 2005
Balls, bears, and a secret garden with Laura Hadley
* November 21, 2005
Around the world in picture books with Zhang Yuanhong
* September 15, 2005
Heroes, princesses, ghostly encounters, and dogs from space with Mary Ramos
* August 31, 2005
Adventures and legends around the world with Jonah and Jamie
* June 1, 2005
3000 years of stories with Genna, Jamie, and Zoe
* April 27, 2005
Games and legends with Sebastian and Chelsea
* March 31, 2005
Bilingual books for all seasons with Robert B. Bowden
* February 15, 2005
Sharing personal connections and memories with Jenny Preece & Dana Druin Bederson
* February 2, 2005
Books from the turn of the century with Annie
* January 18, 2005
Folktales, letters, and numbers with Alberto
* January 1, 2005
Cats and bears, work and play with Jay Schuman
* December 16, 2004
Repairing and riding in cars with Jose Raul
* December 7, 2004
Picture books and poems for young readers with V. Maire Anderson
* November 16, 2004
Chapter book favorites, old and new with Johnna
* November 1, 2004
Multilingual books with Marcia Moore
* October 15, 2004
Tales of respect and community with Alma
* October 5, 2004
Poems, short stories, and historical fiction from Jamaica with Jonathan
* September 18, 2004
Classics and old favorites with C. Thomas McMillen
* August 18, 2004
Beautiful, creative, and imaginative books with Ben Bederson
* August 3, 2004
Classic picture books and old favorites with Diane Barlow
* July 15, 2004
Bug parades and freeway cats with Max
* July 1, 2004
Fun with rhyming books from Singapore with Alberto
* June 1, 2004
Colorful stories of warmth and community with Bryan Nixon
* May 15, 2004
Engaging with illustrations with Beth Bala
* March 15, 2004
Fables and folktales around the world with Toby Rajput
* March 1, 2004
Rare books and faraway stories with Zoe and Sarah

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Brainstorming

Brainstorming - No matter what learning styles you are most comfortable with, brainstorming with NovaMind brings out your best - and if you get stuck, you can use the Branch Proposal System to suggest new ideas - kids are often enchanted by the new directions their learning can take with the BPS.
Memorization - When creating Mind Maps for learning, use the flowing lines of FlexiBranches, bright colors, and humorous images to make the information memorable, and to clearly show the associations between the ideas.
Taking Notes - As a lecture progresses, note the key points as they arise on the main branches of your Mind Map. When the teacher goes into more detail on a point, add sub-branches with appropriate keywords. Where there are specific facts related to the branch, just record it in the text attached to the branch. By the end of the lecture, you will have a compact yet complete record of the entire lesson which will enable you to recall the whole lecture at a glance.
Summarizing Information - NovaMind also makes summarizing research information from text easy, set up key headings about your subject and then add detail on the branches underneath as you extract the information you want from the text.
NovaMind For Your Thesis - Use NovaMind to brainstorm ideas for your thesis then decide on your topic. Plan out your approach to the thesis using NovaMind to break it down into individual topics, sub-topics and possiblities of each. Use NovaMind to build your thesis including all the information and links to further details etc.
NovaMind For Assignments - Record the aims, requirements, research tools and ideas for an upcoming assignment in NovaMind. This helps break the project down into manageable chunks. Cross each accomplishment off your "task list" as it is completed. This leaves less opportunity to overlook any key requirements.
NovaMind For Exam Preparation & Memorization - Your NovaMind Maps become your study maps summarizing vast quantities of information. The use of interconnecting branches, colors, graphics and keywords promote retention of information, prompting visualization of your Map and the retrieval of the information when it counts!
NovaMind For Presentations - Presenting from NovaMind: You can start with your stunning NovaMind document including color and images or start with an outline and get feedback from your audience to build the Mind Map as you go. Your Mind Maps¨ can include hyperlinks to other Mind Maps, web pages or files, allowing you to draw in information from multiple sources. You can build your Mind Map in NovaMind and export it to Keynote, Power Point or as a Java HTML presentation (which runs in your web browser program) for an instant presentation.
Learning Foreign Languages - Learning languages is essentially a matter of associations - something that is easy with Mind Maps. With Mind Maps you can take the LinkWord accelerated learning technique formalised by Dr. Michael Gruneborg to the next level by using images representing the object along with the phonetics of the foreign language version, and then use the sub-branches to represent the variations and derivatives of the word in the other language. This allows you to use the visual association, color and flow in conjunction with the humor, mnemonics, and visual recall of the base conceptual images to cement in the new words quickly and easily.
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Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Study
The Perils of Menial Work
Written by Zen
There are times during university life when your phone has run out of battery or is receiving no service that you find yourself with nothing better to do than actually listen to the lecturer. Such a situation happened to me just the other day and I flew into a complete panic because of what I heard...

Home and School

Home and School Reading and Study Guides: The New Book of Knowledgeby Grolier Incorporated - Reference - 1994 - 105 pages

At head of title: The New book of knowledge.
No preview available - About this book - Add to my library
Home and School Reading and Study Guides: The New Book of Knowledgeby Grolier Incorporated - Reference - 1993 - 85 pages

No preview available - About this book - Add to my library
Home and School Reading and Study Guides: The New Book of Knowledgeby Grolier Incorporated - Reference - 1997 - 251 pages
How to Study and Make the Most of Your Time
This web page on study skills is designed to help you improve your learning and understanding, and ultimately your grades. It is not so large that it would require you to engage in mind-numbing reading of chapter after chapter as is the case with many books on the subject. The information is written in a way to help you "see" and "practice" proven study techniques. This page is used in hundreds of schools and universities and is ranked in the top 5 sites by Google for "how to study."
Available now is a new, inexpensive download or CD on how to improve your learning skills. It includes in one program an enhanced version of all the information below, and much, much more. Please click http://adprima.com/MLS/mlsinfopage.htm and see for yourself.
No two people study the same way, and there is little doubt that what works for one person may not work for another. However, there are some general techniques that seem to produce good results. No one would argue that every subject that you have to take is going to be so interesting that studying it is not work but pleasure. We can only wish.
Everyone is different, and for some students, studying and being motivated to learn comes naturally. If you are reading this page, it's likely that you are not one of them, but don't despair, there is hope! Your success in high school and college is dependent on your ability to study effectively and efficiently. The results of poor study skills are wasted time, frustration, and low or failing grades. It's your life, your time, and your future. All I can say, upon reflection of many years as a teacher, is that time is precious and not to be squandered, no matter what you believe right now.
This guide is designed to help you develop effective study skills. It is not a magic formula for success in preparing for tests, or written or oral assignments. Studying any material requires work! However, by using the techniques described in this guide, and by applying yourself, you can gain a valuable edge in understanding material, preparing for tests, and, ultimately, learning. This guide contains some of the best and most effective techniques of successful students - students who typically have high grades in high school and college regardless of the courses they take. So read on, think about what you read, and prepare to become a successful student! If you have questions, comments or suggestions, please send to me.
Effective Study skills are about more than understanding
Effective study skills must be practiced in order for you to improve. It is not enough to simply "think about" studying; you have to actually do it, and in the process use information from what you do to get better. This is the central idea of this page. All that follows depends on this single concept. There is a saying that goes like this: "Practice doesn't make perfect; perfect practice makes perfect." If you want to be an achiever, take this saying to heart.
The value of a schedule
Before you even begin to think about the process of studying, you must develop a schedule. If you don't have a schedule or plan for studying, then you will not have any way of allocating your valuable time when the unexpected comes up. A good, well thought out schedule can be a lifesaver. It's up to you to learn how develop a schedule that meets your needs, revise it if necessary, and most important, follow it.
A schedule saves time
All schedules should be made with the idea that they can be revised. A good schedule keeps you from wandering off course. A good schedule, if properly managed, assigns time where time is needed, but you've got to want to do it!
Making every hour count
A schedule should take into account every class, laboratory, lecture, social event, and other work in which you engage. There are givens such as classes and so on that have to be incorporated. You must focus on the other "free time" available and how you will use it. Make a weekly schedule and block off the 24 hour day in one hour increments. Indicate times for classes, labs, lectures, social, and work time. Also block off a period for sleeping each day. With what is left over, plan time for study. This gives you a rough road map of the time available. Of course, you can revise your schedule as circumstances warrant.
When to study
The problem of when to study is critical. A good rule of thumb is that studying should be carried out only when you are rested, alert, and have planned for it. Last minute studying just before a class is usually a waste of time.
Studying for lecture courses
If your study period is before the lecture class, be sure you have read all the assignments and made notes on what you don't understand. If the study period is after the lecture class, review the notes you took during class while the information is still fresh.
Studying for recitation courses
For classes that require recitation, such as foreign language, be sure to schedule a study period just before the class. Use the time to practice. Sometimes, practice with others can help sharpen your skills in a before-class study period.
Making and revising a schedule
Don't be afraid to revise your schedule. Schedules are really plans for how you intend to use your time. If your schedule doesn't work, revise it. You must understand that your schedule is to help you develop good study habits. Once you have developed them, schedule building becomes easier.
The Process of Study
How to use your time
Time is the most valuable resource a student has. It is also one of the most wasted of resources. The schedule you develop should guide you in how to allocate the available time in the most productive manner. Sticking to your schedule can be tough. Don't dribble away valuable time. Avoiding study is the easiest thing in the world. It's up to you to follow the schedule you prepared. A good deal of your success in high school or college depends on this simple truth.
Where to study
You can study anywhere. Obviously, some places are better than others. Libraries, study lounges or private rooms are best. Above all, the place you choose to study should not be distracting. Distractions can build up, and the first thing you know, you're out of time and out of luck. Make choosing a good physical environment a part of your study habits.
Strategies
Thinking skills

Everybody has thinking skills, but few use them effectively. Effective thinking skills cannot be studied, but must be built up over a period of time. Good thinkers see possibilities where others see only dead-ends. If you're not a good thinker, start now by developing habits that make you ask yourself questions as you read. Talk to other students who you feel are good thinkers. Ask them what it is they do when they think critically or creatively. Often times, you can pick up valuable insights to help you become a better thinker.
The SQ3R method
The SQ3R method has been a proven way to sharpen study skills. SQ3R stands for Survey, Question, Read, Recite, Review. Take a moment now and write SQ3R down. It is a good slogan to commit to memory to carry out an effective study strategy.
Survey - get the best overall picture of what you're going to study BEFORE you study it an any detail. It's like looking at a road map before going on a trip. If you don't know the territory, studying a map is the best way to begin.
Question - ask questions for learning. The important things to learn are usually answers to questions. Questions should lead to emphasis on the what, why, how, when, who and where of study content. Ask yourself questions as you read or study. As you answer them, you will help to make sense of the material and remember it more easily because the process will make an impression on you. Those things that make impressions are more meaningful, and therefore more easily remembered. Don't be afraid to write your questions in the margins of textbooks, on lecture notes, or wherever it makes sense.
Read - Reading is NOT running your eyes over a textbook. When you read, read actively. Read to answer questions you have asked yourself or questions the instructor or author has asked. Always be alert to bold or italicized print. The authors intend that this material receive special emphasis. Also, when you read, be sure to read everything, including tables, graphs and illustrations. Often times tables, graphs and illustrations can convey an idea more powerfully than written text.
Recite - When you recite, you stop reading periodically to recall what you have read. Try to recall main headings, important ideas of concepts presented in bold or italicized type, and what graphs charts or illustrations indicate. Try to develop an overall concept of what you have read in your own words and thoughts. Try to connect things you have just read to things you already know. When you do this periodically, the chances are you will remember much more and be able to recall material for papers, essays and objective tests.
Review - A review is a survey of what you have covered. It is a review of what you are supposed to accomplish, not what you are going to do. Rereading is an important part of the review process. Reread with the idea that you are measuring what you have gained from the process. During review, it's a good time to go over notes you have taken to help clarify points you may have missed or don't understand. The best time to review is when you have just finished studying something. Don't wait until just before an examination to begin the review process. Before an examination, do a final review. If you manage your time, the final review can be thought of as a "fine-tuning" of your knowledge of the material. Thousands of high school and college students have followed the SQ3R steps to achieve higher grades with less stress.
Reading
A primary means by which you acquire information is through reading. In college you're expected to do much more reading than in high school. Don't assume just because you've "read" the assignments that is the end of it. You must learn to read with a purpose. In studying, you may read the same assignment three or four times, each time with a different purpose. You must know before you begin reading what your purpose is, and read accordingly.
Getting the Main Idea
Getting the main idea in reading is central to effective studying. You must learn what the author's central idea is, and understand it in your own way. Every paragraph contains a main idea. Main ideas are perfect for outlining textbooks. Make it a habit to find the main idea in each paragraph you read.
Extracting Important Details
Extracting important details means that you locate in your reading the basis for main ideas. There is usually one important detail associated with every main idea. The more important details you can identify, the easier it will be to review for examinations because you have made a link between an idea and information that supports it. The more links you can make between details and ideas, as well as ideas themselves, the more powerful will be the efforts of your study.
Don't Read Aloud to Yourself
Generally, reading aloud to yourself does not help you study more effectively. If you move your lips while you read, you're not reading efficiently. If you read aloud or move your lips while you're reading, you are reading slowly, so stop moving your lips. Try putting a finger over your lips. Your finger will remind you not to move your lips. Make an effort to read faster and retain more - after a while, you'll be surprised how little effort it will take.
Taking Notes
Like reading, note-taking is a skill which must be learned and refined. Almost invariably, note taking, or the lack of it, is a constant deficiency in the study methods of many high school and college students. Learning the ingredients of good note taking is rather easy; applying them to your own situation depends on how serious you are in becoming a successful student.
Where to Keep Notes
You must learn to keep notes logically and legibly. Remember, if you can't read your own writing a few days after taking notes, they are of little use. By all accounts, the best place to keep notes is in a loose-leaf notebook. Use dividers to separate the different classes you take. Make it a habit of using your notebook to record ALL your notes. If you're caught without your notebook and need to take notes, always have a supply of loose-leaf paper with you. Insert your note papers into the notebook as soon as you can. Be sure to buy a good notebook, as it will get a lot of wear and tear.
Outlining Textbooks
First of all, don't underline. Use a highlighter. Experience has shown that text passages highlighted are more easily remembered than the same passages underlined. In outlining a text, don't just read along and highlight what seem to important words. That technique rarely works. The act of outlining works much better.
Taking Lecture Notes
Surveying, Questioning, Listening
Taking accurate and concise lecture notes is essential. Develop the habit of taking notes using appropriate methods described earlier in the SQ3R technique. For example, when you listen to a lecture, formulate questions as you listen. Your main job in taking lecture notes is to be a good listener. To be a good listener, you must learn to focus and concentrate on the main points of the lecture. Get them down, and then later reorganize them in your own words. Once you have done this, you have set the stage for successful reviewing and revising.
Reviewing and Revising

Begin with the past

Your path for most effective learning is through knowing
yourself
your capacity to learn
the process you have successfully used in the past
your interest in, and knowledge of, the subject you wish to learn
It may be easy for you to learn physics but difficult to learn tennis, or vice versa.All learning, however, is a process which settles into certain steps.
These are four steps to learning. Begin by printing this and answering the questions. Then plan your strategy with your answers, and with other "Study Guides"

Begin with the past

What was your experience about how you learn? Did you
like to read? solve problems? memorize? recite? interpret? speak to groups?
know how to summarize?
ask questions about what you studied?
review?
have access to information from a variety of sources?
like quiet or study groups?
need several brief study sessions, or one longer one?
What are your study habits? How did they evolve? Which worked best? worst?
How did you communicate what you learned best? Through a written test, a term paper, an interview?
Proceed to thepresent
How interested am I in this? How much time do I want to spend learning this?What competes for my attention?
Are the circumstances right for success? What can I control, and what is outside my control? Can I change these conditions for success?
What affects my dedication to learning this?
Do I have a plan? Does my plan consider my past experience and learning style?
Consider theprocess,
the subject matter
What is the heading or title?What are key words that jump out?Do I understand them?
What do I know about this already?Do I know related subjects?
What kinds of resources and information will help me?Will I only rely on one source (for example, a textbook) for information?Will I need to look for additional sources?
As I study, do I ask myself whether I understand? Should I go more quickly or more slowly?If I don't understand, do I ask why?
Do I stop and summarize?Do I stop and ask whether it's logical?Do I stop and evaluate (agree/disagree)?
Do I just need time to think it over and return later?Do I need to discuss it with other "learners" in order to process the information?Do I need to find an authority, such as a teacher, a librarian, or a subject-matter expert?
Build inreview
What did I do right?What could I do better?Did my plan coincide with how I work with my strengths and weaknesses?
Did I choose the right conditions?Did I follow through; was I disciplined with myself?
Did I succeed?Did I celebrate my success?

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Study

Consequently, everyone has a different "studying style". But the way that you are studying right now might not be the best for you. How would you know? Easy: If your grades aren't what you'd like them to be, then you probably need to change how you study!

I am going to give you some suggestions on how to study efficiently. They worked for me when I was in high school, college, and graduate school. Not only that, but they worked equally well for me in humanities courses (like philosophy and literature) and in science courses (like math and computer science). But, given that everyone's learning style is different, some of my suggestions may not work for you, at least not without some individual modifications. Nevertheless, I urge you to try them. Most successful students use them (or some slight variation of them).

School is a full-time job. And managing your time is important.

If you have a "real" job after school that you do just for fun (or for some extra spending money), or if you participate in extra-curricular activities (whether school-related or not), keep your priorities in mind:

How much time should you devote to studying? A recent survey in the Chronicle of Higher Education suggested that students are not studying enough. So, how much is enough? If you assume that your education is a full-time job, then you should spend about 40 hours/week on it. Figure that 1 academic credit equals about 1 hour. So, if you're taking 15 credits, then you're spending about 15 hours in class. Subtracting that from 40 gives you 25 hours that you should be spending studying at home (or in the library). You should spread that out over the week. Suppose you decide to study Sunday through Thursday evenings, taking Fridays and Saturdays off (from studying, that is). Dividing that 25 hours by those 5 days gives you 5 hours of studying per night. If you think that's too much, then plan on studying in the afternoons, too, or some of Saturday. The above are just rules of thumb. If you're taking a 3-credit independent-study course, but you meet with your instructor only 1 hour/week, then you should add the extra 2 hours to your at-home study time. If you're working to earn some money, you should subtract your work hours from your free time, not from your study time! (If you don't want to do that, then you should consider quitting your job or reducing your course load.) If that still seems like a lot, consider the difference between high-school courses and college courses. The typical high-school course meets every day, for about 5 hours/week. But the typical college course meets only about 3 hours/week, yet is supposed to be more intensive than its high-school counterpart. That's because in college you're expected to put more of your own time into studying.