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Academic Resources
The 8-Hour Day College Time Management Schedule
One of the most important study skills in college is time management. Many students earn grades below
potential or flunk out of college because of poor time management skills. One model for organizing time in
college centers around the 8-hour workday.
Without a college degree, you will most likely be working at the entry level job, doing clerical work, toiling in
labor oriented jobs and at pay scales near minimum wage. These jobs are fine as long as they are what you
choose to do. In any case, you will be working 8 hours per day and 40 hours per week if you are not in
college. After 4 or 5 years of working in these types of jobs, where will you be? At what wage level?
The 8-hour per day model for managing time in college has you in class or studying for 8 hours per day. These
are the same 8 hours you will be putting in each day if you weren’t in college only this time you will be self-
employed.
Most students are in class 2 to 3 hours per day (not counting labs). This leaves 5 to 6 hours per day for
studying reading textbooks, taking notes, revising notes, building and practicing solutions to problems, and
reciting and self-testing on existing notes, etc. Students who spend 5 to 6 hours per day studying usually do
quite well in college. Looking at another factor:
The 8 hours per day model leaves every evening and weekend free from
studying!
That means you can use evenings and weekends to focus on personal growth activities. On the next page, set
up an 8-hour per day model for managing your time in college. Remember that only time in class and studying
counts toward the 8 hours. The steps are:
Cross off class times
Cross off meal times
Cross off work or activity times
Cross off study times
Total should be 8 hrs/day and 40 hrs/ week on the job as a student


To succeed… You need to find something to hold on to, something to motivate you, something to inspire you. | Tony Dorsett