Creating a Study Area
for Distance Learning
It is necessary to have a dedicated personal study area
because this provides important benefits to the study process.
It is a physical and psychological necessity for anyone taking
a professional development course by distance learning, online, or correspondence
studies. It creates a visible, physical, and personal location
where your studies are carried out, providing support
facilities for your study activities. It is a place where you
go to in order to do only one thing, study. Think of it as
being similar to going to your workplace, where on arrival you
switch into work mode. When you go to your study area, you
switch into study mode.
Where should your study are be situated. This will depend on
the layout and size of your home, but there are some ideal
places and some very unsuitable places. Without a dedicated
study area you would need to study on kitchen tables, sofas,
beds, armchairs, dining tables, in rooms that are used
frequently for other domestic activities. These are highly
unsuitable, as they have no professional or academic or
personal development features, and are full of distractions and
barriers to effective studying. An ideal location would be in a
small room that is specifically for study, in the style of a
home office. Some students might have lofts, garages, or
basements, that could be converted. Less ideal, but still
suitable, would be an area in a bedroom, equipped for study,
and not used for any other purpose. This would remove you from
most day and evening time domestic activity (and even if you
are single, living alone, it will keep you away from the
television and refrigerator). If you do have to use a kitchen
or living room, then you will need to alter your studying
schedule so that you are studying when others are not present
in these areas. Don’t try to study in the same room as others,
or where there is domestic activity visible or audible. It
won’t work.
If at all possible, buy a traditional desk. It doesn’t have
to be large, or expensive (a low cost, second-hand, used, desk
will be perfectly suitable). This will immediately give a
professional, workplace, feel to your study area, and give you
drawers and surface space to place your pc, laptop, papers,
printer, pens, study books, on. Next, make sure you obtain a
suitable chair. An office-style, swivel chair would be best,
but a fixed chair will suffice. No matter what style, make sure
that it is comfortable to use for long periods. Again, a used
chair will be just as good as a new one, if selected carefully.
For most courses of study a PC or Laptop will be essential. A
mid to low range one will be suitable for most courses. Ideally
an office suite such as MS Office should be used, but lower
cost, simpler packages are fine too (and Microsoft itself
offers a MS Office in Student-Teacher version, at one third of
the cost of the commercial price). With your PC or Laptop,
comfort is much more important than power. The essentials are a
keyboard that is comfortable to type on for long periods, and a
screen that is comfortable on the eyes for long periods of
work. A printer is essential (a basic, low cost one will do)
even if you email your documents to your tutor. It is good
practice to print off your assignments (outlines, drafts,
finished versions) and read them to proof-read them and see
them as your tutor will (most tutors will print off your work
and then read and assess it). Lighting is important. A well-lit
room is vital, and a desk-top lamp can add focus to the working
area.
Having supplies and peripherals nearby is helpful. A set of
drawers in the desk, or a cupboard, or wall shelves,
specifically for books, paper, pens, pencils, cartridges, etc,
will help you to be organised, keep your study area tidy, and
to have essential supplies available when you need them.
Choose a layout that suits you, but organise your equipment
and furniture so that when you sit down to study you are not
distracted by activity in a doorway, window, or other part of
the room.
For most people, keep it tidy would be good advice. However,
some people can’t work in a tidy fashion, but are very
comfortable working in what others see as chaos. If that is
your natural style, that’s fine, but even then, try to be as
organised, as neat and tidy, as you can be this will help to
keep you on track with your timetable of studies.
Your personal study area should be used whenever you have
planned, scheduled, study activity that requires you to read
and reflect on what you are reading, carry out research on the
internet, correspond by email, telephone, or letter with your
tutor, or write responses to exercises, tests, or assignments.
Don’t use it for anything else. It isn’t the place to eat a
snack, watch television, planning your next holiday, painting
your nails, or chatting to other family members. If you want to
do any of these, leave your study area and do them somewhere
else!
If you have family or friends who live with you or work
close to your study area, talk with them and agree that when
you enter your personal study area they will not disturb you.
Make this a permanent, non-negotiable, rule, broken only in
cases of emergency. You can help by scheduling your study times
when other people are less likely to disturb you, and by
building in time to spend with family and friends when you are
not studying. If you like to listen to music, or the radio,
when studying, that’s ok, but make sure that it is not in
reality distracting you. Television is not a good idea, because
of the distraction caused by the moving images. If your study
area is, by necessity, near a busy area where people are
active, try to schedule your study time when that local
activity is at its quietest, less busy times. Keep your mobile
phone switched off, unless you have to be available to
colleagues from work. If you do have to be contactable at home
by work colleagues, try to make contact first, to stop calls
coming in when you are studying.
For some students it is not possible to have a dedicated
personal study area in the home, or at least not a permanent
one. External locations are available which, although not
capable of being personalized, could be regular locations in
which, with regular use, you can feel familiar and comfortable.
For example, Internet Cafes, where there is most of the
equipment and furniture that you need. You can supplement these
by taking carefully selected study aids such as coursework
books. Internet Cafes usually do charge an hourly fee, which is
usually a reasonable price, but most will give discounted
prices for regular users. Libraries, where there is usually
plenty of desk space, a very quiet and studious atmosphere,
and, of course, reference and subject textbooks which, if not
permanently available, can be ordered and loaned for short
period. Today, many libraries also have pc and internet
facilities. Libraries are virtually free to use, apart from a
low internet usage fee. Your Workplace, where you may be able
to use lunch breaks, and-or time before or after work, to fit
in some study time. It may also be possible to arrange to use a
meeting room or unoccupied office, at least on a short-term
basis. Some of our students who find it impossible to study at
home, and who work in organizations that operate on a 5 day
week, make arrangements to go into the workplace on weekends
and study there.
Establishing a Personal Study Area is one of the most
beneficial actions that you can take when starting to study for
a professional development qualification. A properly equipped,
well organized, study area becomes a recognized space that you
enter into when you are scheduled to carry out some study time.
It becomes a place where you are comfortable and familiar with
the layout and facilities, and where you feel confident that
you can work without interruption, without distractions, and
most importantly, study effectively. Even if you are not able
to establish such a space in your own home, you should make
every effort to recreate as many of the features described
above, in another location. Once established it is easy to
maintain, and grows in usefulness as you grow more comfortable
in it.
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