My students often
tell me that they don’t have “enough time” to do all their schoolwork.
My reply is often a brief “You have as much time as the
president.” I usually carry on a bit about there being twenty-four hours in the
day for everyone, and suggest that “not enough time” is not an acceptable
explanation of not getting something done.
Once in graduate school, I tried to prove to one of my
professors by saying that I was working hard. His answer to me was, “That’s
irrelevant (無(wú)關(guān)的). What’s
important is the quality of your work.” Since then I
have had time to think carefully about the “hard worker” dodge (訣竅), and I have come to some
conclusions — all relevant to the problem of how much time
we have.
If you analyze the matter, you can identify two parts of
the problem: There is, of course, the matter of “time”, which we can think of
as fixed. Then there is the problem of “work” during that time. But, as my
professor suggested, it’s not how hard one works but the quality of the product
that’s important.
That led me to a new idea: the quality of the work. That
concept is perhaps best explained by a sign I once saw on the wall in someone’s
office: “Don’t work harder. Work smarter.” There is a lot of sense in that
idea.
If you can’t get more time, and few of us can, the only
solution is to improve the quality of the work. That means thinking of ways to
get more out of the same time than we might otherwise get. That should lead us
to an analysis of our work habits. Since “work” for students usually means
“homework”, the expression “work habits” should be read as “study habits”.
Then, as a smart student, you will seek to improve those
skills that you use in study, chiefly reading and writing. If you learn to read
better and write better, there are big benefits that pay off in all your
studies.
1..
From the
passage, we know that the author is probably ______ .
A. a
poet B. an educator C. a novelist D. an
engineer
2..
We can infer
from the 2nd paragraph that we students still _____ .
A. have
enough
time
B. can meet the president
C. get everything done
well D.
should accept the explanation
3..
Which of the
following is TRUE according to the passage?
A. The
author’s students make good use of their time to do all their homework.
B. The
author tried to tell the professor that he/she (author) had done a good job.
C. You can’t improve the quality of the work if you
can’t get more time.
D. You’ll try to improve your skills in reading and
writing if you’re a clever student.
4..
What’s the
passage mainly about?
A.
Students don’t have enough time. B. Don’t
work harder; work smarter.
C. No
one can get more time. D.
Read better and write better.