Informatics Fourth Year Honours Course Guide
Time management

Clearly, different students can do different amounts of work in any given time. The information here is meant to be a guide to apportioning this time between activities, and to scheduling activities, so that a balanced collection of work can be conducted over the year. However, it should be stressed that, in general, students have the final say in deciding how to organise their time effectively. Indeed, learning time-management skills is one of the goals for students during third and fourth years.

Lecture-based courses usually have 20 lectures (and possibly some tutorials). For a 10 point course, this leaves about 80 hours for coursework, recommended reading and exam revision and the exam itself. Lecturers should take these estimates into account when assigning work. Students who feel that their workload is excessive for the time available should discuss this with the course lecturer, course representative or contact the course organiser.

Students often report spending large amounts of time on coursework. In many cases this can be traced, not to an excessive workload, but to the student's work practices. Coursework should always be planned in advance. For instance, programming should not be attempted until a specification is planned of the program to be written. Idle hacking in the hope that something will turn up is both wasteful of time and leads to poorly structured and buggy programs.

Another frequent complaint is that an excessive number of deadlines fall at the same time. This only causes a problem if all the work is left to the last minute. If work is staggered throughout the year, with some being finished well before the deadline, then no problem should arise. Lecturers can help students stagger their work by leaving plenty of time between the assignment of work and the deadline for submission. They can also help by announcing the work schedule well in advance. Information about the work required for each course can be found in the online course descriptions.

It is your responsibility to organise your time so that everything gets done. Here are some strategies that may help you to do this:


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