Organise your Work
This is such a simple and rewarding tip you won’t believe it at first. If you organise your work it just feels much easier to go back to. There’s nothing worse than sitting down in a classroom, opening your folder and finding it’s in a complete mess. It can really get you down, so much so that you dread going back into that classroom.
This happens to me a lot – it’s a real downer.
It can happen in a number of different ways. Firstly, it can affect your folder – you have sheets all over the place, secondly, it can affect your book – even if all the information is there it can really dishearten you to see how disorganised it is, finally, it can also affect your digital work – word documents, files, folders etc.
That last one has been getting to me quite a lot lately and has really annoyed me. The first thing is that some of my work I type up is organised into a report-like structure [neat]. It looks bloody awesome and when I return to it after a few days break it’s easy to see where I’ve got to and simple to continue writing. On the other hand, I sometimes don’t get round to organising the structure – this makes it really difficult to get back to work and often I will end up wasting a lesson getting it all into shape. By this point it’s too late, I’ve infuriated myself for the rest of the day and I’m now really depressed about that subject and don’t look forward to the next lesson.
That’s all very well but how much of a problem is that really? Not that much – but if you apply the same disorganisation to your work folders you’ll be in real trouble. I’ll explain what happened to me and hopefully you’ll see my point:
The way I transfer work between home and school is using a memory stick. All my folders at home are organised and all my folders in school are organised as well, but right between that is the memory stick – the weak link in the chain. The memory stick simply has one folder – work. I finished working on a report at home, about 3,000 words, and so I saved it onto the memory stick to be taken to school and printed off. There it was, saved as Task 2.doc. While I had it plugged into my computer I noticed that there was another document called Task 2.doc (an earlier version), naturally I deleted it. The next day I plugged the memory stick into the computer in school only to discover that I had lost about 2,500 words from my report – I had deleted the wrong document.
Sure, this is a lesson in backing up documents but would this have been a problem if my memory stick had been organised. If instead of having on folder with 30 files in it I had 10 folders with 3 folders in each would I have acted so quickly or would I have checked each of the revisions of the file.
Now for God’s sake, don’t make the same mistake I did.
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