52 Weeks to College: Week 14

How to Learn on Your Own

It’s not easy to learn on your own. Having teachers who structure your assignments and hold you accountable is really valuable. But it’s an important skill to know how learn on your own as well.

The passive approach would be to shrug your shoulders and wait until you get assignments from your teachers. But you’ll be much better off (including in your college applications) if you use your initiative and creativity to figure out a way to learn independently and maybe even go deeper and further into a subject than is required. That’s important if you have your sights set on being admitted to a selective college, because selective colleges want excellent students, and excellent students are so crazy in love with learning that nothing can stop them.

You only have to check out what admissions officers look for and value in applicants. This list of questions that Harvard uses in their application process is representative:

“Have you been stretching yourself? Have you been working to capacity in your academic pursuits, your full-time or part-time employment, or other areas? Do you have reserve power to do more? How have you used your time? Do you have initiative? Are you a self-starter? What motivates you?”

Okay, so you’re convinced, but you’re still a bit unsure about how to go about taking responsibility for your own learning.

After all, for most of your life up until now, being a good student meant doing your assignments and conquering tests. True enough, but we’re confident you can do it. Here are our tips for meeting that challenge.

WEEK 14 TIPS & TRICKS

  1. Take yourself to class online. Thanks to the range of free online resources out there, you can choose to learn from world-renowned experts. Make a commitment to watch or listen to at least one lecture per week for each of your core subjects. We bet you’ll get sucked into more. This curated list of TED talks on fiction will only take a few hours to watch in its entirety and it may change how you approach your literature classes forever. Likewise, Richard Feynman’s lectures on YouTube are an amazing way to learn Physics.

  2. Read, read, read. Put a couple of hours into reading every day. You’ll be expected to do at least this much reading in college, so practice now. At a minimum, you should read your high school textbooks through to the end. But why stop there? Pick 2-3 subjects you really like and expand your reading list beyond your high school textbooks. You can get ideas from syllabi (the list of reading and assignments) for college courses on these subjects — those are easy to search for online. MIT, for example, has a super-expansive collection of syllabi from more than 2400 courses. They even have a resource specifically for high schoolers that will help you find materials relevant to your current courses. You can also check out websites for colleges on your list and see what syllabi you can dig up. they are often posted in the course description.

  3. Assign yourself projects to ensure that you are really learning stuff. We all know that it is one thing to watch a lecture or read a book, but an entirely different thing to have to write a paper, complete a problem set, conduct an experiment, or take a test on what we watched or read. If you really, truly want to learn, then you are going to have to assign yourself projects related to your various subjects. But don’t stress – these projects are designed and assigned by you, so structure them in a way you can enjoy. For example, you could do chemistry experiments that use the kitchen as your lab. Test yourself on your understanding of the Maillard reaction by figuring out the best way to get crispy golden French fries. Or decide that you will write a short essay in response to the weekly poetry, fiction, or creative nonfiction prompts on the Poets & Writers website.

    So keep learning. Not only will it help you on your quest to be admitted to your dream college, it will also make your daily life much more interesting.