▼ TUTORIALS
Time Management Tips From An Athlete
These are the things that I do to manage my time and to be sure that all my task will be surely get done. I hope that this will help you also.
- Get organized
and stay organized. Use a big desk calendar for school and
sports. Write down all due dates for schoolwork, projects, and papers.
Write down all sports practices and games. Every week revisit your
calendar and make corrections.
- Manage your time. With competing
demands placed on your time, you must plan your known time schedule. Known
times are school time, game and practice time, and travel time to and from
school, as well as travel time to and from sports practices and events. By
blocking this known time on your calendar, you can determine your actual homework
time and study time.
- Plan your week; don’t let your week plan
you.
Look at your calendar and note when you have projects due, tests
scheduled, and practices and games scheduled. Plan how you will study and
when you will study.
- Use your weekends wisely. Use your
weekend as preparation time for the week ahead. Start homework for the
upcoming week. Read chapters and take notes ahead of time. Use this time
to plan for and prepare for projects and papers that are due.
- Use your travel time to and from school,
practices, and games wisely. Review notes, read chapters, study, or
read books. Another tip - use audiobooks while traveling and read along.
- Do not procrastinate. Do assignments
as soon as they are given, rather than waiting
until the last minute. Assuredly, poor planning and waiting
until the last minute will result in missed practices or missed games.
- Do not get behind. Whether this
pertains to homework, schoolwork, grades, or sports practices, it is
easier to stay ahead of schoolwork rather than to play catch up with
grades, missed assignments, or missed sporting events.
- Take advantage of study halls and free
periods.
Do homework, ask for help, study, and get ahead of your work. At one
school that my children attended, there was no requirement for children to
do work in study hall. Children were permitted to relax, listen to music
(with ear buds), and text, with no expectation that work would be done.
Guess what the children did in study hall? They relaxed, listened to
music, and texted. No schoolwork was done. While the students thought this
was great, this is clearly not a good way to take advantage of the study
halls and free periods that can greatly aid student athletes in balancing
school work and sports activities.
- Take advantage of school resources, such
as tutors.
Many sports teams want their athletes to succeed in school and offer
programs to help their athletes. If your school or community offers these
opportunities, take them.
Demands on our time never end. Our obligations and interests continue to vie for our attention and our time throughout our lives. By introducing
and implementing time-saving tips and techniques early in a student athlete’s
career, we - as parents, coaches, and trainers - can aid in the student athlete’s
success, not only in school and on the playing field, but in life.
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento