You are just one person, with a finite amount of time each day. We often hear students say they need help with time management due to many competing priorities, activities, or just plain demotivation. You don't have to have a fancy planner to organize your time - the best tools are actually quite simple. You just have to find what works best for YOU. Here are the critical components to managing your time as a college student:
- Semester Calendar. This is the big picture/birds-eye-view level of time management. You can't keep it all in your head or rely on your course management software to tell you when assignments are due. You need a semester calendar to capture all the big assignments, exams, projects, and any due dates your professors indicate on course syllabi. Please take a few minutes at the start of the semester to fill this out and put it on your wall (don't put it away in a folder!):
- Semester Calendar Spring 2024 (Semester Calendar Spring 2024 (.doc) or Semester Calendar Spring 2024 (.pdf))
- If you thrive in a computer-based world, we recommend Google calendar
- Weekly Schedule. Your life as a college student ought to be fairly repetitive from week to week. Take time to set your repeating weekly schedule which will help you combat the tendency to waste precious unstructured time. Structure it now before it's too late! We encourage students to start with your courses, then block out the following: sleep, meal times, other weekly activities/meetings/appointments, work shifts, church/spiritual development, exercise or other forms of self-care. Then examine what time is left as unstructured blocks which can be scheduled as study time. Be specific as to the location and what work/course you will typically focus on during that time. Color-coding is also encouraged!
- Google calendar works well for a weekly schedule
- If you prefer word doc, use this: Weekly Schedule
- Daily To-Do List. If you find you need a daily list of to-dos, this is the third level of time management which can be implemented. Just be sure that they are specific tasks which are time-bound and can be completed in a short time period. If you find that something on your to-do list is not getting done day after day, ask yourself why and try to delegate, ask for help, or problem solve a way to hold yourself accountable to getting it done.
- Students like the Microsoft To-Do List app. It makes a satisfying "ding!" when you check off a task.
If you find yourself saying, "I just don't have enough time!" or "I don't know where all my time goes!" we strongly suggest completing a time journal for one week as a first step. Here is a tool that you can use: 168 Hour Challenge