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I thought I might give it a try after a not-too-great year of studies at the university. Published by an MIT and Harvard professor in the early twentieth century, this is a formal piece of non-fiction dedicated to the practice of successful studying and to finding the student's niche and line of work. Rather than advising on how to pass all one's courses with the minimum 50%, with the least amount of effort included, Swain clearly instructs how one can and should thoroughly master his subjects, by not taking short-cuts, not relying on vague understandings, and by profiting on a passion and interest in the subject or problem on hand. The work stretches only about fifty pages, but is densely and fully laden with the advise of an academic figure who wishes to see his students achieve expert knowledge and skill in their future profession - and thus who wishes to have a society built upon capable and responsible workmen, developers and professionals. Should be an insightful read if you want to change your method of studying (for the better).
This book just basically put down in words what I already knew about studying. To me, it was not that useful, but it might be for people who are easily distracted or have been through a school path which did not involve much learning by heart.
Short and sweet book that delivers what it promises.
I'd wager to say that all subsequent "How to study" books are probably varying amounts of derivative from this one. I definitely recognize many points I should have paid more attention to from my college advisors. Since I can't imagine that our ability to gather and retain information has changed much in the past 100 years, you're probably best off reading this and ignoring the other nonsense out there.
The author also liberally quotes Goethe whom I have the biggest nerd crush on. So thats nice.
Couple points. A lot of this book is encouragement to engage more with the text you read. Good books have a lot of thought put into them, Swain is emphatic in his urging to think and criticize while reading. I think for me it's a call to read slower and more deliberately. Instead of chewing through books like soft rice. Maybe undercook the rice a bit, give it some nice texture and cheweyness.
No? Dont do that to your rice? Ok. I'm not a rice expert.
Anyways....
1) Think critically while you study. Read to categorize and understand, not to simply read. How does this information fit into your preexisting model of the world? What fits? What doesn't? Why doesn't it?
2) Think critically before you study. This critical thinking shenanigans doesn't stop. Attempt to understand what you are going to read. What do you know about it? What do you hope to learn? Why can't it be spoon fed to you through a cerebral drip like in the Matrix?
3) Think critically after you study. (you see the pattern here?). Digest what you have read before (ahem* cough* no sorry, just something in my throat *cough*) regurgitating some half baked review onto Goodreads in order to score internet points. Since I've already set a personal highscore for the year for quantity of books read, maybe I'll (*cough*).....possibly.... consider this....
4) Don't just read. Interact with the material. For today's educational environment, look up videos, tutorials, or go to whatever concept you are interested in directly. Talk about it with strangers on the bus. I'm sure that shabby looking gentleman on the corner needs someone to discuss Quantum Physics with. Well, he sure seems excited about something. Multiple modes of learning is best.
5) Be interested. Less helpful if in school, and you are being forced to learn about....uhhhh.... whatever nonsense you are supposed to learn about there..... I dropped out of a premed program because I don't like blood. Don't look at me for answers. But go and pursue things you have interest in. If that's obscure Chinese Science Fiction, so be it. Don't read things because some daft codger told you to. Read the things you find interesting that challenge you and help you to grow. Life's too short to read shitty books.
This book was published just over 100 years ago, but lessons from George Fillmore Swain are still useful to every student and life-long learner.
I wish I read books like this when I was a student, but it is not too late to read it now. I divide the book into 3 main parts corresponding to 3 big ideas: proper mental attitude, proper method, and proper habit of study. Within each idea, the author provided numerous insights. It's hard to remember them all, however, we can pick up 1 or 2 of them at a time for practice. I found several points that are really helpful to me now. - Proper mental attitude: to study with caution and an open mind - Proper method: to study understandingly, build your knowledge from the fundamental, then create a system of knowledge by forming connections - Proper habit: to study a book thoroughly, take time to think of a subject and apply what you learnt
George Fillmore Swain was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and later at Harvard University. He wrote this book for students but I find it really helpful for educators like me. The point I agree with him the most is "the only real education is self-education". In the end, no one can give you the knowledge or skills, you must be the one, who seizes them and make them yours. Teachers are just facilitators showing students what students can do and encourage them to take step by step in their own way.
I think I will translate this book into Vietnamese and share widely with all of my students. I hope this will help my students as it did to me.
The book has very good advice on how to Study. I recommend it to anyone who is interested in getting more out of their readings. The author has condensed the knowledge from other literature and has offered the necter of wisdom out of his own learning.
“Without interest your study will be perfunctory and of little use to you. Make yourself believe that for you, at that time, it is the most important thing in the world.”
I believe that this book covered all major subjects. For me the language and level of literacy was very tough, but I'm sure that for someone with English as their first language it should be a breeze.
As a study guide for students and adults of all age, “How to study,” is a book written by George Fillmore Swain. Based on Swain’s experience as a professor of Harvard University and MIT, this book explicates tips/fundamentals of what we recall as, “proper studying.” Or in another word, good study habits. Swain uses proverbial phrases and quotes by famous people as examples to convey his point to the readers. This was also one of the reasons why I was attracted to this book. It was an online quote from this book that captured my attention, which led me to wonder in curiosity what this book was all about. Below is the following quote:
"….Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much, Wisdom is humble that he knows no more.”
This quote was shown in the first chapter of this book, where Swain introduces the mental attitude one needs in order to get the full benefits of education. This chapter particularly focuses on the theme wisdom and the humble position one should have towards education. As this book has 5 main elements of the subject, studying, Swain divides the book into 5 chapters building on to his previously stated crucial study methods. Overall, I really enjoyed reading this book despite its sophisticated language throughout the 5 chapters. It is fairly short compared to other books, yet I believe it carries out the most fruitful information for any student who seeks help on improving their study habits. This book may be boring for some as it contains many philosophical explanations and examples outside our knowledge range, but it would be a good book to read once in a life time. However, I would highly suggest readers to read it twice, since the information the book embraces can’t be remembered by just reading it once.
An older book giving out key points to effectively studying. One of the more interesting things I learned is that when you're reading or studying something and you stop comprehending what you're trying to learn, you should take a break and do something else like go for a walk or play around. Physical activity is important for keeping the mind sharp. The most effective students don't continue reading on if they don't understand something, they will pull out a dictionary and make sure they understand the entire context of what they're reading.
Good little book on how to study... Helpful for the studying minds....recommend it to any one who wants to know basics of studying... I will surely go for the references suggested in the book one by one from where the writer of the book has got inspiration..
Thank you for making this amazing book available for free on kindle. Few pages and worth it for students who wants main tips rather than detailed long boring explanation.
I have yet to see the effects of this book, but I do believe it's techniques are quite helpful and rather motivating. It comes to me as a surprise that I'm the first to writer a review in it.
How to study - don't think it is a book for kids - it is a book for all, a really wonderful book about reading - in my opinion one should read this book first and follow the instructions to read the other books...