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We have talked a lot on this channel
about how to do well academically.
How to study effectively,
how to ace your tests
and how to crush those homework assignments
even when you have barely any time to do them.
But of course,
successful students don't just do well academically,
they do well all around.
So, that begs the question,
what separates truly successful students,
who have it all together
in all areas of their lives,
from everyone else?
Well that's what I wanna talk about in this video
and today we're gonna cover
eight habits of successful students
and yes, this is definitely a riff
off of Stephen Covey's excellent book,
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People,
which I have read and loved.
But these eight habits are unique.
These come from my own observations
of people that I know who are successful
and things I've tried to cultivate in my own life
and I think every single one of them
is gonna help you in the upcoming semester.
So lets dive right in.
(upbeat music)
To start things off,
successful students are forward thinkers.
J.R. Tolken wrote in, The Hobbit that,
"It does not do
to leave a live dragon out of your calculations,
if you live near him."
And as a student,
you have a lot of live dragons to contend with.
Not just on the academic side of things
but on all fronts.
You've got your career plans.
You've got relationships.
You have your living situation,
errands you need to run,
there is a lot to keep track of.
And when I was in college,
I had a lot of friends who always seemed to be scrambling
to get these things done at the last second.
They were basically letting life sneak up on them
but if you can build a forward thinking mind set,
this isn't going to happen to you.
And you'll also position yourself for opportunities
that would pass others by.
So if you're not already a natural forward thinker,
if you're not automatically thinking of things
that are coming up in the near future,
how do you become one?
Well I definitely think it is possible,
because I didn't use to be one
but now I am.
When I was a kid,
I remember my mom would just like look up
from whatever she was doing, oftentimes
and ask me,
hey Thomas, have you brushed your teeth today?
And I remember thinking, like,
how do you think of stuff like that?
I wasn't talking about brushing my teeth,
you weren't brushing your teeth,
it just popped into your mind.
And eventually I realized it was because
she cared about the health of her sons
and she was simply being mindful about it.
And I worked to become that kind of a person myself.
So if you're like I was back then,
you don't already have this mental machinery put into place,
the first step is to build some structures
into your everyday routines,
that remind you to think in a forward thinking manner.
One good way to start doing this,
is to create a reminder
on your task management system or your calendar
to sit down once a week
and think, what do I have coming up in the near future?
Do I need to sign up for classes?
Well then I should make a reminder for the exact time
that the class scheduler opens
so I can get in there
and get my classes before everyone else takes the good ones.
Or do I need to get an apartment soon?
If you live in a college town like I did,
then it's likely that every apartment complex
is gonna have their leases start around the exact same time.
And because of that,
everyone's gonna be signing leases
all in one big drove.
So, do yours early,
otherwise, come next semester,
you're gonna be living in a van down by the river.
And while you're going through this mental exercise,
also think about your relationships,
maybe you have somebody who has a birthday coming up soon
or you have a friend that you haven't talked to in a while.
I find that when you actually think about these things
and when you apple a forward thinking mindset
to your relationships,
you tend to maintain them better.
And this is important,
because as people get older,
they start to get busier
and they start to have less time for their friends
and it's only people who are deliberate about maintaining
their relationships that actually keep them.
(upbeat music)
The second habit is that successful students
deliberately move towards adulthood.
They don't let adulthood sneak up on them.
And by that,
I'm not talking about becoming a person who hates fun
and tells kids to get out their lawn
but every human is going to have skills they need to build
and challenges they need to face
at some point in their lives.
And a lot of people try to push those things off
as much as they possibly can.
But if you can become the kind of person
who is willing to take on those things early,
I'm talking about things like having your own bank account,
doing your own taxes,
your filling out your own financial aid forms
or like, learning how to iron shirt
or do your own laundry.
Then once you have to do those things,
you've already got that base of skills to apply to them.
(upbeat music)
Habit number three,
successful students strive to become,
what I like to call, solution finders.
They're the kind of people,
that when faced with a tough problem,
that doesn't have an immediately apparent solution,
they are willing to push through
and figure out how to solve it.
And sadly, a lot of students aren't like this.
A friend of mine named Matt is a web developer
at a pretty big company
and this company values this solution finding mindset
so much that they have a rule
for people who get stuck on problems.
They call it the 15-Minute Rule.
Essentially, if an employee gets stuck on a problem,
they have to spend 15 more minutes,
working on that problem
before they're allowed to ask for help.
And during that time,
they have to document everything they do
and write down what didn't work
so that way when they do ask for help,
they're able to give context
to the person who's helping them.
Additionally, once they hit that 15 minute mark,
they must ask for help.
And this rule creates a nice balance.
It makes them be independent
and solve problems on their own
but also ensures that they're not being so stubborn
that they never ask for help
and that ensures
that they're not wasting the companies time.
And adopting this rule
actually proved very useful to you as a student
because if you're willing to solve problems independently,
you're going to solve a lot of them
that you would've originally asked for help on
and if you do have to ask for help,
you're going to show your teacher
that you take the problems seriously
and that you're not just crying out for help
the moment things get tough.
(upbeat music)
Habit number four
is to start actively building relationships
with your teachers,
with your professors
and with other faculty members at your school or university.
When you do this,
you start to build a network of people
who aren't just in your immediate age group
or at your same level of progression.
And it also has a couple of other very good benefits.
Number one,
these people are gonna be able to tell you
about opportunities that you would've otherwise missed
and if you ever happen to need a letter of recommendation
for a job application or a scholarship,
those are gonna be the people who you can go to
because now they know you and they trust you
and they're gonna be willing to do it.
And you probably shouldn't ask for recommendation
from your roommate Jimmy.
So, how do you start building this network?
Well a great first step
comes at the beginning of a new semester.
Go up to the teacher at the end of each class,
introduce yourself briefly,
shake their hand
and just tell them you're excited to be there.
That makes a really great first impression.
Additionally in your free time,
if you happen to come across like an article,
that you think one of your professors
would be interested in,
email them that article.
Just say hey, I read this and I thought of you.
I remember back in 2011,
I was taking my first marketing class in college
and this was right around the time
that Val was getting ready to release Portal Two
and they did something really weird
with the marketing for Portal Two.
They had this weird, convoluted game set-up
where people could buy games on the steam
and play lots and lots of hours in those games
and that would all contribute to making Portal Two
release a couple of days early.
So essentially, they found a way
to let all these other games
that weren't selling all that well,
ride the coat tails of this big anticipated game
and I thought that was a brilliant marketing strategy.
So I found an article about it,
I sent it to my marketing professor
and said, hey I think you'd be interested in this
and the next week he actually talked about it in class.
So doing that definitely helped to build that relationship.
(upbeat music)
The fifth habit is that successful students
are always trying to learn outside of class.
They're trying to learn from a variety of different sources
and they are branching out into different areas
that aren't on their narrow major path.
And I think this is really important to do.
Because once you start getting interested
in a variety of different subjects
and you start dabbling in different areas,
you start to build this diverse web
of connections in your brain,
that allows you to be more creative in your main work.
Plus when you take just a little bit of time
to branch out from your major path.
You might stumble onto something
that actually proves to be a huge boon
to your future career prospects.
One great example is my best friend Martin.
He's always been really interested in language learning
but he majored in MIS in college
but that didn't stop him from creating a blog
all about how to learn new languages
and that actually got him some recognition
in the language learning community.
He was actually on a list
of language learning experts pretty recently.
Not to mention, the experience he got building that website
actually lead directly to him getting hired
at a web development agency in our city
right after graduating,
who usually didn't like to hire recent graduates.
Because he had a lot of experience
that most people didn't have.
(upbeat music)
Habit number six is to constantly be keeping your ear
to the ground for opportunities.
Here's the thing,
when your in school
or especially when your in college and university,
there are a ton of opportunities around you.
But you have to be willing to look for them
and to know where to look.
One great thing to do
is to be keeping your eye out for bulletin boards
around your campus or in your school
because a lot of opportunities
are gonna be posted as fliers on those bulletin boards.
Additionally, follow your schools' social media accounts.
And I'm not just talkin about the main social media account.
Follow your professors and your teachers.
Follow departments that you're a part of.
Because a lot of these departments
and professors, they're gonna post opportunities
that they think their students would be good fits for.
And this habit is actually directly related
to how I got my first internship,
because I was following my schools career center on Twitter
and they posted a tweet about a big company in our area
that was putting on this freshman leadership seminar.
So I saw the tweet, I signed up, I got accepted
and at that event I met a mentor
who was instrumental in getting me hired at that internship.
(upbeat music)
The seventh habit
is that successful students
put a lot of effort into keeping themselves
both physically and mentally fit.
When you're a student whose ambitious,
there's often this general mindset
that you should be spending all of your time studying
or pursuing opportunities
and when a lot of students do this,
they often let their nutrition habits,
their exercise habits,
and their sleep go by the wayside.
And what's worse, they'll often work themselves to the point
where they mentally burn out
or they become depressed or have a lot of anxiety.
And the sad things is,
when they're letting their physical and mental health
go by the way side, they aren't able to perform
in the things that they really want to do in the first place
and truly successful students know this,
which is why they make time for exercise.
They make time for making good healthy meals
or getting them at the dining center
and they also get enough sleep every single night.
And one little side note that I'll make here;
successful students are willing to ask for help
if they need it.
If they're dealing with mental burn out
or anxiety or depression.
They will go ask a professional
if they can't deal with those issues themselves.
(upbeat music)
And that brings us to the final habit on the list.
Successful students try things
before they think they're ready.
I wanna underline this idea
with something that Neil Pasricha talks about
in his book, The Happiness Equation.
In the book, he talks about how people
generally approach new skills or challenges
and how they do it in a linear way.
They feel like they have to be able to do it first
and then they'll want to do it
and finally they'll do it.
But when you think this way,
you never actually get to do the thing,
because you never gained the skills
to do it in the first place.
So, Neil encourages you to take that linear model
and make it circular.
Do, which leads to can do,
because you're gaining skills through doing.
That leads to want to do
and the circle repeats and enforces itself.
Plus you're often much more qualified
than you think you are.
A lot of students and a lot of people in general
deal with Imposter Syndrome,
they think, who am I to do this,
I don't have a certification.
I don't have a qualification.
But in many cases, you don't need it.
I'll give ya an example.
When I was a freshman in college,
I really wanted to join a club on campus
called, Business Council.
These were basically like the leaders
of the business school at the university
but they had a rule,
they only let people in who were sophomores and above.
Very rarely would they make an exception for a freshman.
So what did I think?
I didn't think, I'm just gonna wait.
I'm just gonna you know, wait till I'm a sophomore.
I thought, I'm going to apply
because what's the worst that's gonna happen?
They're gonna reject me
and I'll try again next semester.
So I applied, I put my best foot forward
and I got accepted.
And what's more,
during my first semester as a member,
I also got elected to the leadership board.
So if something seems exciting to you,
but it also seems a little scary,
try it anyway
because that is what successful students do.
That brings us to the end of my list
but if you have additional ideas
or habits you think I left off of it,
I would love to hear from you guys
in the comments down below.
So definitely let me know what you're thinkin.
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