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How to Get Better Grades and Have More Fun

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How can you improve your grades?

Follow a few simple, powerful principles (as shared by a Harvard MBA).

And that's why you'll find this book so practical. It's easy and simple to understand. Yet, it does much more than just tell you how to get better grades. It shows you.

Al and Joanne are two students who are struggling to success. A graduate student who has discovered how to "work smart, not harder" helps them solve the problems they face each week as students. He shares with them a few simple but profound principles that work.

So if you want more time to do the things you like to do, How to Get Better Grades and Have More Fun will show you.

143 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 1, 1985

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26 people want to read

About the author

Steve Douglass

7 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Randy Rosso.
22 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2021
Cheesy, yet very practical, especially for someone in school. I would suggest it to most of my students actually!
Profile Image for Chloe W.
73 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2025
Helpful and well organized. I should probably reread it before the Fall semester, though, because most of the tips apply to a philosophy you implement over a semester, not the week before Finals!
Profile Image for Steven R. McEvoy.
3,841 reviews177 followers
January 5, 2023
Are you concerned about your grades dropping in University and having enough time for fun, games and extracurricular activities? If so, then this book is a must read for you. This book takes the 80/20 principle and applies it to academics. The authors of this book so believe in it, it has a written guarantee that if you apply it, your average will go up 1 grade point or your money back. The best thing is, not only does it work, it is easy to apply. The longest chapter is 12 pages and with just 12 chapters it is a chapter a week for a term and you will peak for your exams.

You might be asking yourself, “What is the 80/20 principle?” It was a business term developed by Richard Koch and it seems to be pretty consistent, one of those great patterns in the chaos of the universe. Take McDonalds as an example: 80% of McDonald’s profit comes from fries and drinks, the other 20% of their profit comes from everything else on the menu. Or take real estate: a friend’s father owns a real estate office; 80% of the sales consistently come from 20% of the realtors, the other 20% of sales comes from the rest.

You’re probably wondering, “What does this have to do with school?” A lot! This book will teach you how to do school better, and I can personally vouch for it. My first time in University I had a 58 average. I have read this book a few times since being here at The University of Waterloo and I have an over 80 cumulative average. I have g1ven away over a dozen copies of this book and every person who has read it has thanked me for the book and the help it has been.

I’ll give you a personal example. A few years back, I took the Introduction to Church History Course RS 230 with Arnold Snyder; the first week of the class I asked him his objective for the course. He told us this will be your final exam question, “You’re sitting at your Christmas dinner and your uncle Buck says ‘So I hear you took the history of Christianity course, tell me the story in your own words’.” So instead of doing my usual and making tons of charts of names, dates, place and theories, I focused on the story - being able to tell the history clearly, concisely, and simply in my own words. I saved hours and hours of work and time spent memorizing just because I knew the objective for the course.

(First Published in Imprint 2005-09-14 as 'Is your objective very visible?')
Profile Image for Bill Forgeard.
802 reviews91 followers
February 16, 2013
A corny yet readable book from the 80s presenting some helpful study techniques in story form. I've had it sitting on my shelf for years as an outreach tool but never actually read it until now :) Thanks for the reminder Geoff!
Profile Image for Luce-Virlynn .
16 reviews
July 18, 2011
This was a really good book. The plot was a little corny but it was a quick read and got its point across. I learned a lot from this book.
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