04/05/2026
Point 1: Give Priority to the Inaugural (First) Month.
The first month of a semester is where first class students quietly pull ahead. Most people are still in “holiday mode” or waiting for things to get serious. That’s the exact window you use.
Here’s what “giving priority to the first month” actually looks like in practice:
📌 Show up 100%, Attend every class in the first 4 weeks, even 8am lectures. Sit where you can see/hear clearly.
📌 Build your learning system fast
From day 1, Get a notebook/folder for each course. After each class, spend 20 mins rewriting or summarizing the notes that same day. Your brain stores it better when it’s fresh.
Proverbs 27:1 warned about procrastination.
📌 Map the lecturer
Note 3 things per lecturer:
1) Do they repeat certain phrases?
2) Do they set questions from their notes or textbook?
3) What’s their marking style? Ask past students too.
Proverbs 9:9 says — the wise get wiser by observing.
📌 Get the materials early
Week 1: Ask for course outline, handouts, and recommended textbooks.
Start reading Chapter 1 before it’s taught. When the lecturer teaches it, it becomes revision for you. That’s how you stay ahead without last-minute stress
📌 have a mindset shift
The first month isn’t “warm-up” — it _is_ the race.
📝📝 *Quick self-check for Week 1-4:*
- Do I know each lecturer’s name and office hours?
- Can I explain the last lecture to a friend without my notes?
- Do I have a folder + outline for every course?
If yes, you’re already operating like a first class student
It's not too late👌👌👌👌👌
Watch out for point 2