This book is written for university students in Great Britain. As an American way past college, it is hard for me to judge. I was hoping for more generalized information on learning. However if you are in the target audience, I can see this being very helpful.
The book I read to research this post was Study Skills for Dummies by Doreen du Boulay which is a very good book which I bought from kindle. A lot of this book is about going to college or university for the first time and the various problems connected with that, that can crop up. I have done courses at college quite a few times and so I think I can cope with most of the problems likely. One bit of advice I quite liked was if you are sharing a place with other students, you should take it in turns to cook and wash up. Cooking for several people isn't that much different to cooking for one and it gives you time you can spend studying when others are cooking and washing up. There is some stuff on memory in particularly loki which is if you have to remember a list like bullet points for a speech. You imagine you are in a roman villa and are exploring it. For the 1st item you imagine walking into the 1st room and picture the item in the room in the most outrageous way possible. This helps you remember it. You then try and link this item to the second item which will be in the 2nd room and you can remember a very long list in this way. They use a roman villa because they were very decadent and often were outrageous. You can pretend they have obtained unusual things from far flung parts of the empire.
it had some useful tips, but i was hoping for more information about how to concentrate on studying and avoid procrastinating and the only "tip" on the subject was "don't procrastinate!". yeah like i didn't know i shouldn't :P it had some good info though about how to get more from lectures and seminars and im going to try keeping a learning diary as the book suggested and see how it works out in the end.
In my opinion, the tips provided by the book are just too impractical to apply onto myself. For the time being, my undergraduate studies are focusing much on understanding fundamental topics for each subject and doing relevant exercises. However, some tips can anyway provide me insights in utilizing my time! So I'll look for the next much-more interesting book to polish up my study skills!