Title: Time management and Project Management
1Time management and Project Management
- Undergraduate Research Skills
- Nayda G. Santiago
- ARG - CAHSI
2Outline
- Time Management
- Project Management
3Why manage your time?
Is this the picture that represents you in your
normal state?
4Or is it more like
- We need to manage time because
- ?
- ?
- ?
- What is your reason?
5Understand your time
- Time is your most valuable resource.
- Analyze your time to understand the most
efficient way to use it.
6To understand the value of time
- Value Every MinuteAuthor Unknown
- To realize the value of one year Ask a student
who has failed a final exam. - To realize the value of one month Ask a mother
who has given birth to a premature baby. - To realize the value of one week Ask an editor
of a weekly newspaper. - To realize the value of one hour Ask the lovers
who are waiting to meet. - To realize the value of one minute Ask the
person who has missed the train, bus or plane. - To realize the value of one second Ask a person
who has survived an accident. - To realize the value of one millisecond Ask the
person who has won a silver medal in the
Olympics. - Time waits for no one.
- Treasure every moment you have. You will treasure
it even more when you can share it with someone
special.
Taken from http//www.worldofquotes.com/
7Calculate
- Calculate the cost of your time
- Calculate one of my minutes
- My salary (secret) 75,000.00
- My hours per year (10 months) 1500
- 75 per hour, 1.25 per minute
Taken from 1
8Analyze your time
- Taken from Kathleen Riepe, University of
Wisconsin, Parkside, Time Management
presentation - Compute your leisure quotient
9Whats your LQLeisure Quotient?
- Sometimes we just dont realize how much time we
spent in non productive ways.
- Here are some examples of leisure
- Chat
- Listening to CDs
- Watching tv
- Daydreaming
- What others can you think of?
10Exercise Finding your LQ
- Keep a close record each day of how much time you
spend on leisure activities. - Divide this number by 960 minutes to get your
LQ. - 960 minutes equals 16 waking hours per day.
- Leisure activities are important to help you
recharge, but too much can be detrimental.
11Exercise
- Fill the document with yesterdays tasks.
- Find out your leisure quotient.
12The WADE Method
- W Write it down
- Record everything you have to do
- Use a planner or to-do pad
- A Add it up
- Estimate how long your tasks will take
- Best, Worst, typical?
- D Decide
- What will you actually do?
- Are you overloaded? Delete, delegate, delay,
diminish (to shorter tasks) - E Execute your plan
- Do not procrastinate, do not do things perfectly
Taken from 2
13Mark Twain
- If you want to kiss a frog, kiss it fast
- Do difficult tasks first.
- They grow.
14Not sleeping a solution?
- Student lag
- Jet lag
- Are you creating the equivalent of jet lag by
keeping an inconsistent sleep schedule? - Do you get up at about the the same time each
morning? - Do you almost always get 7-9 hours of sleep per
night? - If you answered no to any of the questions, you
are compromising your bodys efficiency.
15Decreased Sleep
- Cumulative sleep loss can lead to decreased
waking alertness, impaired performance and
worsened mood. - Bonnett, 1985 Broughton and Ogilvie, 1992
- Decreased performance related to sleep loss has
been implicated in some major disasters. - Exxon Valdez
- Sleep deprivation is equivalent to the effects of
alcohol intoxication - Fatigue Among Clinicians the Safety of
Patients, David M. Gaba, MD and Steven K. Howard,
MD, New England Journal Med Vol.347 No 16
10/17/02 - 24 hrs of sustained wakefulness is equivalent to
0.10 Blood Alcohol Concentration. - Dawson and Reid , 1997
- Surgeons awake all night had 20 more errors and
took 14 longer to complete the task than those
who had a full nights sleep. - Lancet, 1998
16Symptoms
- Feeling tired not rested
- Mood changes
- Irritability
- Affective liability
- Impaired Cognitive Functioning
- Poor concentration and memory
- Decreased attention
- Calculation problems
- Difficulty in making quick, correct decisions
- Inability to reliably estimate your ownalertness
due to above symptoms
17Sleep Deprivation
- Gilberto Colon Latimer
- QEPD
18Are you working youre As off?
19How would prioritize this list of daily tasks?
Write the underlined word of the tasks which
would be on yourA ListB ListC List
- Buy laundry detergent.
- Write a eight page essay for English.
- Prepare for a Biology quiz.
- Dust the videos on the bookcase.
- Review for midterm test that counts for 50 of
grade. - Schedule an appointment with a Professor.
- Complete a journal entry.
- Email a high school friend on another campus.
- Shop for a new pair of athletic shoes.
- Armor-al the dashboard of the car.
20Are you working your As Off?orDo You Have
C-Fever?
- A LIST
- 1 Midterm test that counts for 50 of grade.
- 2 Write a eight page essay for English.
- B LIST
- 3 Prepare for a quiz in Biology.
- 4 Schedule an appointment with a Professor.
- 5 Complete a journal entry.
- C LIST
- 6 Buy laundry detergent.
- 7 Dust the videos on the bookcase.
- 8 Email a high school friend on another campus.
- 9 Shop for a new pair of athletic shoes.
- 10 Armor-al the dashboard of the car.
21C Fever
- Have you ever noticed?
- That the videos must be alphabetized before you
can settle in to review for a test. - That rumpled pile of clothes left in the corner
since Thursday night just has to get folded and
put away before you can start that English essay. - If so, you may be suffering from C Fever
22 Conquer Procrastination
235. Conquer Procrastination
- Why is C fever as common as the cold?
- The A tasks may
- Produce minimal endorphins
- Be too lengthy
- Be too difficult
- Be too threatening because of the possibility of
failure - Be too threatening because of the possibility of
success
24Its All about Endorphins - The Feel Good Hormone
- Develop a Conditioned Response to the Tasks you
Procrastinate - Set a goal to complete a task/project
- After completing the task, reward yourself with
something that is pleasurable for you - The body releases endorphins- the feel good
hormone - Over time with repetition, you will come to
associate feeling good with completing a
task/project - You wont procrastinate as much
25Pacing
Athletes know the phenomenon of running with
someone ahead of them to increase their
times. The same effect can be achieved with
studying and completing schoolwork.
26Because work expands or contracts to fit the time
allotted, make pacing work for you by doing the
following
- Estimate the time needed to complete a task.
- Subtract 15 from that estimate.
- Set a timer to help you reach the goal of
completing the task in reduced time.
27Take the Offensive With a Planner
28Take the Offensive with a PLANNER
- A planner helps you
- See the big picture
- Be time efficient
Record deadlines, appointments, etc.
29Be Realistic in your Expectations
30Be Realistic
- Examine your schedule.
- Be realistic about what you can accomplish.
- Dont try to juggle too many things.
- Dont set yourself up for failure.
31Is The Jar Full?
- Stephen Covey in his book, First Things First,
- "Okay, time for a quiz." He reached under the
table and pulled out a wide-mouthed gallon jar.
He set it on the table next to a platter with
some fist-sized rocks on it. "How many of these
rocks do you think we can get in the jar?" he
asked.
32ROCKS
33Gravel
34Sand
35Water
- Is the Jar Full?
- What is the point?
- If you work really hard you can always fit some
more things into your life."
36No, that is not really the point
- The point is this
-
- Put the
- Big Rocks
- in First
37References
- Tim Hindle, Manage Your Time, Essential Dk
Managers, DK Publishing, Inc., 1998. - Julie Morgenstern, Time Management From Inside
Out, Second Edition, Owl Books, 2004. - Kathleen Riepe, University of Wisconsin,
Parkside, Time Management presentation
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