Students - How to Use Positive Affirmations to Improve Your Learning Confidence!
Posted: Friday, October 21, 2005
by Royane Real
Royane Real
If you are a high school student or university student who is studying and trying to prepare for exams, you already know that you will benefit from learning better study techniques and better note-taking methods. What you may not know is that an important part of being a good learner is to feel very confident about your learning ability.
Why is it important to have good confidence in our ability to learn? When you don't have a good confidence in your learning ability, you will approach learning situations and exams in a state of nervousness and anxiety. A lack of confidence in your learning ability will actually interfere with you ability to study effectively, and it will interfere with your ability to remember what you have learned.
How can you tell whether or not you lack confidence in yourself as a learner? If you lack confidence about your learning ability, you probably already know it because you become very tense and nervous about facing exams. You may even break into a cold sweat at the thought of writing an exam. You may have nightmares about being unprepared for your test.
It will be helpful to you if you know more about the messages you are sending to yourself about your learning ability. The thoughts you have about yourself can improve, or worsen your perfomance in school.
Spend some time paying attention to the sorts of thoughts that frequently go through your mind when you are preparing for an exam. What messages are you telling yourself about your ability to learn and succeed?
Spend several days becoming aware of the way you talk to yourself internally. Write down the thoughts that pass through your mind so that you can review them.
Are your statements about yourself mostly positive or mostly negative? Do your thoughts reflect confidence in your own abilities? Or are you constantly yelling at yourself for your mistakes and shortcomings? Are you calling yourself stupid, lazy, or unsuccessful?
If your statements to yourself about your learning ability are mostly negative, you may think that yelling at yourself will make you try harder and improve your performance. Actually, this negative self talk will increase your anxiety and will interfere with your ability to learn effectively.
Our brains are actually designed to enjoy learning. We don't need to make our learning situation difficult.
Take some time to watch very young children learn. During the first few years of life, humans learn a huge amount of information at a much quicker rate than they will ever learn again. When very young children learn, they do so in an attitude of joy and exploration. They don't criticize themselves for being bad learners.
Even as adults, we do our best learning in an atmosphere of fun and exploration. We learn better when we think learning is fun. We don't learn as well when we tell ourselves that we are stupid.
If your negative opinion of yourself is holding you back, how do you go about changing it? First you should find out whether your anxiety about your performance in school is caused by a learning disability that has never been diagnosed. There are many forms of learning disabilities that can interfere with your ability to read, think and concentrate. These include such conditions as dyslexia and Attention Deficit Disorder.
People who grow up with these conditions may be convinced that their learning difficulties are a result of being stupid, when really these learning disabilities affect many people who are extremely bright and creative.
If your poor opinion of yourself as a learner is a result not of a learning disability, but simply because of a lack of confidence in yourself, you can take steps to improve your opinion of yourself as a learner. Two very effective techniques that can help you change your self-image are affirmations and visualization.
Instead of focusing on your current negative self-assessments, focus instead on the kind of person you would like to be. What personal qualities do you want to have as a learner and a student?
Write down a description of how you would like to be and how you would like to perceive yourself. For example, do you want to see yourself being able to remember better? Do you want to face exams in a happy, positive state of mind, instead of in a wretched state of nervousness?
Write out some simple phrases that express your desired qualities as something that you have right now.
Spend time creating images of yourself learning easily, and let the feelings of confidence fill you up. Revisit these positive images frequently. See yourself succeeding in your exams, and feel the sensations you would feel as you get a very good mark on your test.
Using visualizations and affirmations correctly can go a long way to improve your confidence in your ability to learn, and when you are more confident about your learning ability, you will actually learn better.
This article is written by Royane Real. Be sure to read many other excellent self help articles at my new website at http://www.royane.com
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Top-level comments on this article: (4 total)this is boring to long
yeah, weird, but interesting
Informative and interesting :)
Its works the same with teaching Royane. Having negative opinions of our students can be a self fulfilling prophecy.
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