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Study Is Hard Work

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The classic guide for the college-bound student on how to acquire and maintain good study skills. Originally published in 1956, but just as useful and relevant today, this book covers everything from developing a vocabulary to taking tests and using libraries.



Acquiring and maintaining good study skills is, as the author says, hard work. But it is also the only way to succeed. William H. Armstrong was himself a teacher (as well as author of the Newbery Medal-winning novel Sounder) and this book comes from his own experience in the classroom. Only a teacher would make the observation, "It is paradoxical that listening is the easiest way to learn but the hardest study skill to master."

Chapters includes Learning to Listen, The Desire to Learn, Getting More From What You Read, Putting Ideas in Order, Letting Mathematics Serve You, How to Study Science, and Tests and Examinations.

Armstrong wants all students to develop successful habits. As he writes, "The beginning of success is interest. Being interested is the basic obligation that is necessary for success in whatever work you do." Work is always necessary for success but Amstrong's guidance and insight will make the work much less hard and much more rewarding.

148 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1956

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818 people want to read

About the author

William H. Armstrong

47 books65 followers
William H. Armstrong (1911 - 1999) was an American children's author and educator, best known for his 1969 Newbery Medal-winning novel, Sounder.

In 1956, at the request of his school headmaster, he published his first book, a study guide called Study Is Hard Work. Armstrong followed this title with numerous other self-help books, and in 1963 he was awarded the National School Bell Award of the National Association of School Administrators for distinguished service in the interpretation of education.

In 1969, Armstrong published his masterpiece, an eight-chapter novel titled Sounder about an African-American sharecropping family. Praised by critics, Sounder won the John Newbery Medal and the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1970, and was adapted into a major motion picture in 1972.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
Profile Image for Kiri.
Author 1 book42 followers
August 14, 2017
This book was originally published in 1956, and it reads that way, in a delightfully didactic manner. Consider the opening sentence: "Those who seek miracles or panaceas to replace work should stop here."

Armstrong, a teacher himself, has a lot of good advice to deliver. He describes how a student can best position himself or herself to get the most out of school and studying. I found myself nodding along as I read, and I see that many people recommend getting this book for high school or college students, but at the same time I'm not convinced that it's likely to be well received by young folks - the advice feels *right* once you've been through school, looking back, but it's probably harder to see and employ when young.

Despite the assumption of a rigid, traditional educational experience (no fields trips, hands-on, active, or inquiry-based learning here - just lectures and book study), there is much that is empowering. Armstrong talks about the gifts you've been given that enable you to be an individual, to focus your will and achieve, and to build a rich memory of knowledge and experience. He places the responsibility for identifying internal motivation and for sticking to a schedule on the shoulders of the learner. He has specific, salient advice about how to improve reading, listening in class, summarize concepts, and improve in pretty much every basic subject in school.

My absolute favorite part is chapter 7, "Books and the Library." Armstrong launches into a 4-paragraph paean on the Book that begins by describing books as "the memory of mankind." He goes on: "[Books] push back the boundaries of our ignorance, and open wide vistas of thought and history that reach beyond the incomplete and narrow experience of the generation of which we are a part, and we become a part of the whole human community in all time and in all places."

If nothing else, read this chapter. Better yet, read the whole book - it's short and very enjoyable!
Profile Image for Kazen.
1,475 reviews314 followers
October 29, 2019
The text down the left side of the cover says that Study is Hard Work is "the most accessible and lucid text available on acquiring and keeping study skills through a lifetime", and the table of contents points in that direction with headings like "The Desire to Learn" and "Acquiring Skill in Methods".

I gobbled up the first few chapters which discuss the importance of listening, getting more from what you read, and the merits of scheduling your study. I found myself nodding and marking a couple of well written lines that I agree with.

After that Armstrong breaks out study strategies by subject, and it quickly becomes apparent that this book is aimed at middle and high school readers. How to build your vocabulary using prefixes and suffixes. How to outline a textbook chapter. How to structure a paragraph. While I could glean some tidbits from the first section there was nothing for me here.

Something that struck me is how much education has changed since this book was written in 1956. Armstrong talks extensively about tests that require paragraphs and full essays as answers, while much of what I encountered in school was short answer or multiple choice. I suspect that the balance has shifted even more in that direction since I graduated. It's refreshing that he doesn't resort to "hacks" or how to rig technology to make your study more efficient, but the focus on middle school level material doesn't suit me well. Might be good for a young person, but lifelong learners can move on.
Profile Image for Sarah Elizabeth Smith.
54 reviews11 followers
January 24, 2024
An excellent bridge for those practical, intelligent teens that appreciate knowing what to expect as they transition out of homeschooling and into dual enrollment or trade school classes.
Profile Image for Chris Gorges.
12 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2019
If you look at the description for this book on Amazon’s page, it says that “this is the best guide ever published on how to acquire and maintain good study skills.” That sounds like it’s filled with a good dose of hyperbole, but it is actually a pretty accurate description.

It was certainly written with college students in mind, and if you are currently in college or plan on going to college soon, than you shouldn’t hesitate to pick up a copy of this book for yourself. However, even if you are not a college student, this is still a great book to pick up. That is because it can help you develop great study skills that can be applied to the way you learn in general.

One of the greatest skills one can have is to be adaptable and learn new things, and this is a great book that can help you accomplish just that. That is why I featured it as one of my top 5 picks for 2019 on my website.
Profile Image for Catherine.
130 reviews6 followers
February 16, 2024
It’s interesting to me that people such as Cal Newport get really popular because they present information about studying that has been around for what is quite probably centuries (allowing, of course, for updates in technology). Methods of reading, summarization, and other learning really have not changed.

This book is useful and compact. It does present information that can be found elsewhere (but in more monetized formats), and in language that would probably put off a contemporary reader (I do love a good Miltiades reference though).

This will probably be the last time I read this book (I have read it once before, and skimmed a few sections since); the idea of course being that I have learned everything the book has to offer.
Profile Image for Moritz.
28 reviews
January 7, 2020
How to study better—from the fundamentals (learning to listen, understanding words) to the details (how to use books, maximizing exams). Sometimes more vague than practical but overall a useful read. Full of great quotes too. Recommended reading for students young and old. "Beware of the commencement speaker who lauds you for the goal you have reached. You really have reached only the starting post. From this point on your success will be measured largely by your ability to study."
161 reviews
October 23, 2023
Written by a brilliant children‘s book author, scholar, history professor and Connecticut sheepherder, this concise, eloquent lecture of a book was meant to instill values in high schoolers that would steer them toward writing succinctly, testing fluidly, learning avidly and thinking well. But as the popularity of this work attests to, adults who read Armstrong are all the better equipped too, in facing life‘s demands after academia.
Profile Image for Jigme505.
22 reviews2 followers
August 31, 2019
I wish I knew about this book when I was in college. It would have definitely helped me get aquatinted with the necessary habits required to excel in school. Well, better late than never!
Profile Image for Godine Publisher & Black Sparrow Press.
257 reviews35 followers
April 26, 2010
"This uncompromising title foreshadows the clarity and honesty contained within . . . The student who reads [this:] carefully will be prepared not merely for success in school, but for something far more important: a life of self-fulfillment. David R. Godine is to be praised for bringing this remarkable book before the public in a new edition."
—John R. Silber, President, Boston University

"He speaks truthfully about the discipline required for learning, and about the pleasures of order and system in acquiring knowledge. Any reader, of any age, will enjoy this book."
—Jill Ker Conway, Author and Former President, Smith College

"There is much to admire in this wonderfully commonsensical book. The optimistic, and realistic, assumption that learning is accessible to the ambitious, that one can learn how to learn, underlies a kind of democratic scholasticism. Mr. Armstrong knows that the bright futures belong to students who make the effort. The modest effort required to read this practical little book should be handsomely repaid, in school and in life."
—Marlyn McGrath Lewis, Director of Admissions, Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges

"An indispensable classic; comprehensive, clear, pragmatic."
—Ann Quinn, Dean of Studies, Deerfield Academy
1 review28 followers
August 29, 2017
Note that this book is hosted free on HathiTrust.

It boils down to this:
Learn to see stories for their structure: theories wrapped up in facts and anecdotes. Learn to see stories as opportunities to get excited and discover more about the world, and use this passion to fuel your studies. But most of all, you are a discipulus, so embody discipline.

This was recommended to me as a kind of studying bible, and indeed this is a bible on how to be the perfect student, but NOT how to perfect your learning. The author seems held up on this idea that studying should always be a longhand activity, whole sentences in outline form, as though creating muscle memory for your writing hand were one's highest priority, and that this whole sentence outline should be reviewed often. If this were how people really learned, children wouldn't need to be drugged to go to school.

Resources I found more helpful in that area:
Anthony Metivier runs a blog/podcast on every day memory techniques as opposed to competition techniques.
The Key to Study book and blog run by Anna and Lev Goldenouch teach how to learn by linking visuals in your head in a kind of mindmap.
Profile Image for Albie.
479 reviews5 followers
Read
September 14, 2009
Study Is Hard Work: The Most Accessible and Lucid Text Available on Acquiring and Keeping Study Skills Through a Lifetime by William Howard Armstrong (1998)
Profile Image for Chuck.
110 reviews27 followers
September 28, 2023
There's a lot of justifiable praise out there for this tome of study wisdom. And there was a time when I really needed a guide like this -- high school and college. Because life is always filled with some kind of study (hopefully) I was able to enjoy many parts of this book as I applied the instruction to things I'm working on now.

But much of the book gets very granular on the kinds of topics and assignments you would only study in prep or college. Also, when I was the age of the ideal reader of this book, every tool and resource was in analog form. With everything digitized, including learning tools, writing apps, library catalogs, etc., I kept trying to imaging today's student wrapping their head around some of the very old fashioned advice here.

Finally, I always appreciated those teachers who were academic nerds, very precise and demanding, ever while I often hated them. The author of this book carries the tone of that type of character, that I imagine would come off to today's young student as too eccentric, unnecessarily precise, maybe arrogantly superior. I say this as I've worked with high schoolers in the last decade and was a little shocked to find out how much less is expected of students. First and foremost, most schools I worked with did not assign homework. When we inquired with teachers why this had changed, their response was that they had given up, and now just have them complete assignments in class.

Which brings me to what might be the most important skill the advice in this book might help build - the ability to work alone, in deep solitude, perhaps for hours at a time on independent projects, without socializing, checking the phone, multi-tasking -- what Cal Newton calls "Deep Work". With that in mind, the title of this book is appropriate and honest. How can we build complex skills, encourage new ideas, create unique and additive products, if we don't put in the work to gain the ability -- on our own -- to flesh them out and communicate our own ideas and inspirations?
Profile Image for Ross Bonaime.
302 reviews18 followers
May 16, 2019
"Study Is Hard Work" ends an unintentional streak of my 1,000 Books to Read Before You Die list centered around reading, whether focused on reading that can change your life ("The Autobiography of Malcolm X," "The Uncommon Reader," "Reading Lolita in Tehran"), reading as a way to a better life ("A Time of Gifts," "The Gentleman in Trollope"), or just a history of reading ("In the Vineyard of the Text").

"Study Is Hard Work" is more a textbook that any book I've read on this list so far, an instructional guide in how reading and writing the right way can help improve how one learns and retains information. I'm quite glad I got to this book this early on in this list, as I'd be pretty pissed off if this ended up in my last stretch of books.

"Study Is Hard Work" feels like it should be essential reading for anyone entering high school or college, and especially for all teachers. That being said, if I had read this when I was fifteen, I probably would've rolled my eyes, but now, I feel like there's a lot of great ideas here. But also, I feel like many of my teachers attempted to utilize these tactics in my education, to varying degrees of success. Was I ever going to read a history book for fun, for the sake of appreciating my history textbooks more? Absolutely not. But would I attempt to organize my notes or plan my day better? Sure. I'd be very curious to know how many of my high school teachers read this book, which would explain why I feel like I've heard so many of these ideas growing up.

"Study Is Hard Work" never really felt like I was learning any groundbreaking ideas because of this, but rather, I felt like I was getting a refresher course on reading and study tips that I hadn't heard in years. William H. Armstrong gives a nice refresher to my days in school, but I'm not sure I was hearing anything new in "Study Is Hard Work."
72 reviews21 followers
January 21, 2023
"The wise student listens with both their ears and eyes, hearing what the teacher is saying, and, at the same time, watching closely when the teacher is writing on the board or pointing on a map. When directions are given they are written down quickly, and one is never insulting to the teacher by asking, 'Should we write this down?'" -Learning to Listen (9)

"Mind-wandering can be checked by taking notes. Writing is one of the best ways to train yourself to listen. In order to write you force yourself to listen" - Learning to Listen (11)

"The teacher is the guidepost for the journey, but the journey is yours. The teacher can light the lantern and put it in your hand, but you must walk into the dark" (21).

"Nothing great was ever accomplished without enthusiasm" -Ralph Waldo Emerson (27)

"Your capacity for thorough work in any subject (mathematics, English, science, etc.) depends largely upon your ability to master and use the fundamental vocabulary of the subject" (48)

"Mental laziness and a limited vocabulary are usually bedfellows in the same brain" (48)

"Poetry is the best words in the best order" -Coleridge (49)

"Not only is your written work the measure of what you have learned, but it reveals more of your character, your willingness to pursue excellence or accept mediocrity, than perhaps any other of your school work" (78)

"To write well, you must think correctly. You cannot hope to write clearly unless you first have clearly in mind what you are going to write" (79)

"Excellence, like courtesy, manners, and thoughtfulness, has become somewhat old-fashioned from lack of use. Since you will hear 'minimum requirement' and 'permissible' so often to describe what is acceptable, we might pause to examine this beautiful word 'excellence,' lest it miss being a part of your vocabulary, or, more importantly, miss being a part of your philosophy of life" (80)

"Your teacher is impressed by neatness, by conciseness, and accuracy" (81)

"Only a disinterested fool walks past the trash basket and throws away a paper that has just been returned" (81)
Profile Image for Edward Chamberlin.
37 reviews1 follower
February 7, 2020
Definitely a worthwhile book to read if you're at school for any reason, but also if you choose to pursue autodidacticism of any sort. It was probably geared to be read at a younger age than when I read it, but it had some worthwhile tips, specifically regarding the study of individual subjects or how to approach books. A lot of its tips overlapped with How to Read a Book, which came out around the same time (1940s or '50s), and both are definitely worth studying if you want to get more out of reading challenging books.

Where I did disagree sometimes was with the author's attitude. Maybe it's just because I'm from a different generation, but when the author says something like "A paper is worthless if there are mistakes in spelling, punctuation, diction, etc." I found myself pretty annoyed with him. I then proceeded to find a spelling error later in the book, and had to ask myself if the whole book was worthless! I mean, trust me, I'm OCD about spelling and punctuation, but I am not dense enough to think that if Milton misspelled a word in Paradise Lost, it would render the entire epic worthless. To me, that thought is perhaps even more juvenile than the original misspelling!

Anyways, now I'm going off on a tangent. Well worth a read and thankfully quite short and precise, I'd recommend this to someone if are slackers like me when it comes to actual studying.
265 reviews1 follower
April 9, 2021
Reading this book is hard work.

For Christmas, my mother gave me a copy of 1001 Books to Read Before You Die. Study is Hard Work made the cut. Thinking that I’d better get started on the list, I found a digital copy of William H. Armstrong’s book.

Well, I was let down. Armstrong does have some excellent advice. But he doesn’t present that advice in a lively manner. For me, one essential for any good book is that I have to WANT to read it. In that regard, Armstrong’s book is a big letdown. It’s very hard to read through the chapters because they are dry, tedious. Perhaps if Armstrong had included some of examples of students he knew who benefitted from this techniques, the book would draw in the reader.

I will say that Study is Hard Work has value as a reference book. If struggling students pick chapters here and there they might find some value in this one.

One thousand books to go...
Profile Image for Epickkasten.
63 reviews
November 3, 2020
I wish I had found and read this book when I was still in college, or better yet, before I started college. Even in this digital age, I think this book still offers plenty of wisdoms for students out there.
896 reviews
August 13, 2023
There were many useful tools within this book for learning to study more effectively. It seems an invaluable book for students and teachers. My regret is in not having had access to it during college days.
Profile Image for Regan.
112 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2024
Read for professional development - education and the times have changed a lot since this was written and self-discipline is more important now more than ever. I kept thinking about how kids just don't have time to do have of what he is suggesting because of the distractions and fast pace of life.
Profile Image for Lisa Houlihan.
1,213 reviews3 followers
Read
November 29, 2021
Looking back, I can see which of my teachers applied principles from this book to their work.
43 reviews
Want to read
June 5, 2022
1000 Books to Read Before You Die - p. 25
June 5, 2022
Profile Image for M.
705 reviews4 followers
July 31, 2022
Read this book in order to provide "guidance" to my kids to help their study habits. The book is a bit dated and hence "old school". More subjective than empirical and not as helpful as I hoped.
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