uc pseudonym wrote:There is a slight discrepency here in definitions of "studying." When I heard the amount of studying college students claimed to do, I assumed, like you seem to, that study meant actively reviewing material for an exam, and I found that almost incredible. However, I have found that most people operate with a definition closer to "doing work that in some way relates to a class." Thus, all time spent writing papers or reading is considered study.
Also, purely out of curiosity, what level of school do you refer to?
AS, AA, and a bit more.
I typically spent maybe half an hour to an hour a week, total, including everything. Ninety minutes on the real high end with multiple papers due. My programming exercises were done in-class (sometimes before the prof finished explaining how to make them work), I would look up at the clock, see 30 or 40 minutes to class, write a 5-10 page paper and get to class on time (it's easier in the humanities than the sciences), I would skip low-point-value homework and would do faster extra credit assignments so that I could skip more... Yeah, I suppose I wasn't exactly a model student, but I still got mostly As and was recommended for honors programs more than once.