In 20 17, Han, the first liberal arts student in Guangxi college entrance examination, was admitted to Tsinghua with a score of 68 1. Perhaps many students, when approaching the college entrance examination, are grasping every minute to review and brush the questions, while our senior Han is just the opposite.
On the eve of the college entrance examination, Korea is not much different from usual. He followed the drama step by step and read extra-curricular books without giving up his hobbies. Why can Han take the exam so calmly and get such excellent results?
Many people may think that Han has a high IQ, but in fact? That was not the case.
Han's IQ is similar to that of most children. The reason why she is so excellent is actually related to her cultivating good study habits and having her own set of efficient learning methods.
You know, natural schoolmasters are a minority after all, and more schoolmasters actually come from ordinary people. The gap between learning tyrants and learning scum may not lie in intelligence, but in learning habits and methods that are often ignored.
Han once shared his successful experience: if you master efficient learning methods, you will master the golden key to getting high marks.
The importance of efficient learning methods is self-evident, which can get twice the result with half the effort. Paying attention to preview before class, mastering in class, reviewing after class, summarizing review knowledge regularly and establishing your own set of wrong questions are all very good learning methods.
And we may have overlooked another problem, that is, the cultivation of good study habits. Only by cultivating and establishing good study habits from an early age can we give full play to the role of efficient learning methods.
/kloc-before the age of 0/2, it is a critical period for children to develop their personality habits. We should cultivate children to have good study habits, and it is very important to seize this period. In fact, it is to seize the child's primary school for six years. After that, parents will be much less worried about their children's study.