Study Methods
©
By Michael Casey
My daughter is studying in the room behind me, she’s
“driven” so says her school, which is good, because you can only do the work
yourself, nobody will do it for you. It reminded me how I studied.
If I go all the way back I can remember my brother
studying to get into University. He used to have a reel to reel tape recording
of Cream music screaming out of just one speaker. I have that speaker in the
room behind me, with some fake flowers on top. So it’s amusing that his niece
is studying with the silent speaker near her.
Another brother inherited the speaker and took it
to University with him. As for me, I just did a bit of the OU, though I did
meet Eric Clapton himself, my brothers were the cream academically, but it was
me who met the man from Cream.
I got a cassette recorder in 1973, we all went to
Digbeth Civic Hall for an auction of household stuff, and it was part of the load
my dad bought. We also bought a high stool with red seat. That was the stool
that I perched a typewriter on when I started to write a decade later.
Now what did I do with the tape recorder? I copied
Status Quo’s Caroline album to a tape and then listened to the tape while I did
my homework. I also recorded my French and Spanish vocabulary to it, along with
some History notes when I was getting ready for my O Levels. I think I was the
last class to do O Levels before GCSEs were invented.
My brother had left home, so I was all alone in
the homework room, or middle room as we called it, so music was company, along
with my BBC Radio4 and Folk Weave on Radio 2.
There was a tv programme on that said don’t study
too long, break it up, otherwise you forget what you have just learnt. My
brother’s wise words were “a little bit often.” However in those days I played
rugby, so Saturday was a rugby day. So I gave myself off that day, which meant
I did all the work on a Sunday.
Now if I had listened to my brother I would have
done even better, but I still did do very well. Now the next generation is
studying. The girls have a fancy Blik Dab Radio in their room, I was able to
buy it with some vouchers I had. It’s small with a great sound, so I donated it
to them and I kept an old one.
So music and study continues in the Casey family,
though Katy Perry and Capital radio is preferred to Cream and Clapton now. They
say that Classical music is good for the brain and helps it work better, I’ll
have to wait for the research into Katy Perry and brainwaves to come out.
My small daughter loves to read and she loves
having a class of 40 soft toys lined up as she reads to them. This is her study
method. When she grows up she wants to be an Animal Biologist.
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