Preparing for Assignments

Preparing for Assignments


Using Moodle

The best place to start with most of your assignment work is Moodle. This is where you will find all the key information you need, prepared by your lecturers and tutors. If you are finding Moodle difficult to navigate, try working through the guidance prepared for you by the faculty's technical team, BaL Digital.

This section provides tips on overcoming barriers to time management, techniques for using time well, and ideas for long-term time management.

Time management - video resource

10-minute video

(You will be taken to a 

Panopto recording)

Click on the image to start



Positive time management methods

It can help to think about your study in terms of how, when and where, if you want to make use of your time effectively...


HOW should I study?


WHERE should I study?

Plan your study time with our interactive Study Time Calculator. You will need to save a copy to be able to do this!!

Barriers to time management (and how to avoid them)

Perfectionism 

The pursuit of unrelenting standards can be a barrier to success. Striving to do your best is not the same as perfectionism.

How do I overcome perfectionism?

Procrastination

Perfectionism can be a form of procrastination, and procrastination arises from unhelpful rules or assumptions about what we expect of ourselves/others/the world. When we detect that we feel uncomfortable about doing something, our natural reaction is to avoid it.

How do I overcome procrastination?

Longer-term time management: Planning your term

A term plan can give you a clearer idea of your total long-term workload, and provide goals and aims to work towards. Here are 4 steps to produce one:

Step 1: Draw up a table with a row for each week of the semester. Draw in columns for 'deadlines', 'targets' and 'things to remember'.

Step 2: Work backwards from the end of the semester, adding in your assignment deadlines, presentations and exam periods, in the 'deadlines' column. This helps identify busy periods and provides goals to work towards. Include all of your lecture and seminar times, and identify particular sessions that you will need to prepare for. 

Step 3: Use the 'things to remember' column to note any key events that you need to take into account when planning your time (things like birthdays, family events and social fixtures).

Step 4: Decide on the major tasks which you need to complete for each of your assignments or deadlines. Break the bigger tasks down into smaller chunks and prioritise the most important according to the weighting of marks allocated. Fit these tasks into the 'targets' column and work backwards from the deadline to calculate when you should start working on an assignment or task.

Reading Strategies

If you have been presented with a reading list for part of your course, you may be wondering whether you have to read everything on it. The good news is that the answer is usually “no”!

Reading for university is a skill which you can learn fairly quickly. The key is to be selective and effective.


Ask yourself: What do you need to read now in order to complete your assignment, prepare for your seminar or keep up with your course reading?

How to decide if you need to read a source


Preview the text.


If you think it may be relevant, move to the next stage ...

 Skim the text



If you think parts of the text may be relevant, move to the next stage ...

Scan the text


If you think the piece of writing is worth your effort, you may now want to read it all and make some notes.

Some things to consider after you have read a source

Final tips (speeding up your reading speed)

Factors affecting reading

Do not underestimate the impact that external and internal factors may have on your reading. Dunn and Dunn (1970) suggest that there are 21 variables that affect our ability to learn, including how we relate to light/noise and whether we like to learn alone or with other people. 

Think about your reading environment and preferences...

Try experimenting - Good luck with your reading!

Note Taking

The aim of taking notes is not to end up with pages and pages of text, but instead to create something useful that you can use to jog your memory

Whether you are making notes in lectures, from textbooks/journals or for revision purposes, this handout offers some suggestions for different note-making techniques that you may wish to try university.

There are many strategies available for making notes. Below are just a few which you may find useful in lectures, seminars or personal study, depending on your preferred approach to learning:

Cornell notes:

Cornell style notes for note making

For reading (note making)

Make your own copy of this Google Doc

or

Download the PDF 

Cornell style notes for note taking

For lectures and seminars (note taking)

Make your own copy of this

Google Doc

or 

Download the PDF 

Visual/auditory methods:

Mind Map Example

Some traditional methods:

Procrastination

Definition: “The act of delaying or putting off tasks until the last minute or past their deadline” (Cherry, 2022, para.1).

Procrastination is not laziness; you are choosing to do something else instead of the task that you know you should be doing. It is very common for people to procrastinate and these are some of the many reasons why we procrastinate (not an exhaustive list):

It is habit forming and although we know it causes stress and can drain you of energy, it can be a difficult habit to break.

Recognising that you are procrastinating.

If you are filling your day with low-priority tasks or moving the important task down your ‘to-do list’ you may be procrastinating.

Why are you procrastinating? 

How to stop procrastinating

Break down your big tasks into smaller, bite sized chunks. Whilst this makes the ‘to-do’ list longer, it also makes it more achievable. You get the satisfaction of ticking off tasks quicker providing immediate gratification.


Put a date next to each item on the list and be strict with yourself about completing them.


Put together a schedule. If you work better in short, intensive bursts, add 30 - 60 minutes into your routine (more than once a day if needed). Set an objective for each scheduled time, put down the distractions and get it done. When you have completed your objective, tick it off and move onto something else. When putting together your schedule, as well as scheduling tasks, add time for you, for example to relax, exercise, socialise, do chores and sleep. These things are important to keep you happy and healthy.


By working in short bursts you are less likely to put it off or become distracted/bored. Remember it is generally harder to start a task than to complete it.


Reward yourself at the end of a session or the day and look at what you have accomplished rather than what is left to do.


For more information or for help setting up a schedule, contact us.

Reference:

Cherry, K. (2022, November 14). What is Procrastination? Verywell Mind. https://www.verywellmind.com/the-psychology-of-procrastination-2795944

Getting Started with your Assignment

When writing an assignment, you may have a clear idea about how to answer the question and structure your work. However, this is not always the case. We often meet students who ask:

“I have done some reading, but how do I actually go about writing my assignment? And how do I decide what to include?”

Step 1: Check what you have been asked to do


Step 2: Do your research

This stage of the process involves finding information on the topic of the assignment. Your lecture and seminar notes are good starting points, as are texts recommended on your unit reading list. 

For tips on how to find useful information, speak to the library staff. 


Step 3: Use your research to come up with ideas for your assignment

Once you have started to populate it, the grid might look like this:

Step 4: Use a concept map to set out your assignment plan/ideas

An example of a concept map:

Step 5: Start writing

You will hopefully now have enough ideas to begin writing. If not, get in touch with your course team or Academic Skills Tutors to discuss your planning further. Our handouts on structuring an assignment and building an argument will help you with the next stages of the process. Good luck!

Interpreting your assignment task

It is natural to have concerns when starting to produce an assignment, and many of them can be overcome with planning and stress management. However, if you develop the skills for interpreting the assignment questions, you will be in a much stronger position when producing future assignments.


How can I make sense of the assignment task?


Taking the question or task apart

Assignment questions in business and law subjects can be broken down into three main components:


These words are usually the easiest to identify within the question. Task words give instructions, or tell you what to do. For example, 'discuss', 'evaluate' or 'critically assess'

These words or phrases usually make up the biggest part of a question. They are often in the form of a statement for you to evaluate. Where task words tell you what to do, the content tells you what to do it with. However, not all questions will include a statement or many content words. In this case, they will certainly contain specific terms.

These are subject-specific words or phrases which may require evaluating. For example, in the question “outline Modigliani & Miller’s dividend irrelevance hypothesis”, the specific term would be the dividend irrelevance hypothesis.


Examples:


“Critically discuss if and how non-audit services threaten independence, and why is it important for Ethical Standards to restrict certain non-audit services.”

Task words: critically discuss       

Specific terms: non-audited, independence, Ethical Standards


“Discuss whether Imran has a claim for misrepresentation and identify his available remedies. Illustrate your answer with relevant law.”

Task words: discuss, identify, illustrate              

Specific terms: misrepresentation, remedies

Taking your tasks apart in this way will help you to establish exactly what you are being asked to do and will help you to ensure that you do not go off track.


Command Verbs/Task Words

Academic words are used in assignment titles and marking criteria to tell you what to do. This is a guide to the most common ones and what they are asking from you.


Analyse: Examine in detail identifying the most important points.

Compare: Show how two or more things are similar and the relevance or consequences of these differences. 

Contrast: Lay out two or more arguments to identify the differences. Indicate if and why these differences are important. You may also be asked to indicate which argument is preferable.

Critically discuss: Looking at the arguments for and against something and weighing them up according to their strengths and weaknesses.

Define: Present a precise meaning.

Describe: Give the main characteristics or features of something.

Discuss: Write about the most important aspects, the arguments for and against and the implications of, something.

Evaluate: Assess the importance or value of something. You will usually need to give the evidence for and against.

Examine: ‘Look closely’ at something, thinking and writing about the detail, and questioning it where appropriate.

Explain: Give reasons why something happens or is the way it is.

Justify: Give evidence to support an argument or idea, why decisions or conclusions are made with consideration of objections.

Outline: Give the main points and/or main structure.

State: Clearly give the main features. Be aware, this is not usually in a list or bulleted form.

Summarise: Draw out the main or most important parts of something.


Cottrell, S. (2019). The study skills handbook. Macmillan International Higher Education.

McMillan, K., & Weyers, J. D. (2012). The study skills book.