Explain Learning Study Group work- how to use features and actions

Modified on Tue, 24 Sep at 11:52 AM

How do I Pass My School's Hardest Classes, With 25 or More Friends?

 

 

            To pass Biology, Spanish, Algebra II, Physics, European History, or other challenging class, together in a two to eight person Study Group:

 

 

            Step 1: How to get people in a group:

 

  1. In the library, at a study hall, start a playing-cards group, or join one. Get to know each other; find people like you who are having a lot of fun; and then give everyone a flier you printed out from the bottom of the landing page of the site, and talk about starting a study group.

  2. Utilize classrooms where the desks are put into small groups, or groups of at least two people.  Hand out fliers, and talk about starting a study group.

  3. Sports teams are a great place to start, where people interact as friends.   When you are in the van, going out to a game, or in the locker room, give your friends a flier, and talk about starting a study group.
     
  4. Before class, or on the bus, when people are waiting around, hand out fliers to your friends, and engage them about the positives of starting a study group.

  5. Go to the library and find one other person studying on their laptop, and talk about the flier that you printed out from the landing page of the site.

  6. If there is already a presence of the site at your school, find others already on the site by searching the Tutor Search page from the button on the middle-right on the Home page.  Make sure you fill out your profile first, which takes about five minutes, so others will be able to find you.  Simply search for a class, book, and any specific person, for a Study Group that you can join, or use as a Tutor group member to.

  7. Print out lots of fliers, and hand them out to your friends and colleagues in every class you have.  Then tell everyone we ought to get together, and have fun.  With activities on the weekend, and after school, and with Study Groups to all pass.

  8. Meet up at a cafe or on the lawn, with your laptops.  Hand out fliers, and begin to have fun.  Or tell the cafe to hand out all these fliers that you print out, to students that come there.  The more the site spreads at your campus, the more people there will be to have fun, and find each other.

 

            Step 2: Starting the group:

 

  1. After you get their attention, have a place in mind on campus with a wifi Internet connection, where you can sit down, at a table, and talk with each other. Or use it anywhere with a hotspot from your smartphone. This could be an outdoor table, a cafe, a library room, a cafeteria table, a dorm's general area, a fraternity's general area, a hallway at the gym, or even in someone's parked car.

  2. Or, everyone goes home, and can use the site virtually, with Skype to talk to each other on the screen, from a desk with your laptop or desktop computer, and Internet connection.  Or, do either way, whenever you choose!

 

            Summary:

 

            That's the genius behind Study Groups. Your support network of friends is what makes the whole thing worth it. Record all your positive experiences, and re-read your journals and see all your pictures of work and activities after. You got the best grades you could with social interaction and fun activities, and recorded the whole thing. Now you have a valuable reference for later in your career, and memories of those fun activities during this time in your life.

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