How to Stop Procrastinating on Your Homework
That deadline starts as a whisper, then a nudge, and now it’s a siren in your head. But you’re on your phone, scrolling through anything to avoid that one history paper.
This isn’t laziness. Laziness is not caring. Procrastination is knowing you have to do something, wanting to, but feeling completely stuck. It’s usually a sign that you’re overwhelmed, confused about the assignment, or just afraid of not doing a good job.
You can break the cycle. It doesn’t take a huge surge of willpower. You just need a better system.
Shrink the Task
A huge project is terrifying. "Write a 10-page paper" feels impossible. So don't do that. Break it down into laughably small pieces. No, smaller.
Instead of "write paper," your to-do list is now:
- Open a document and type the title.
- Find one article on the topic.
- Read the first page of that article.
- Write one sentence summarizing what you just read.
Each step is so small it feels silly. That’s the point. You can’t talk yourself out of "open a document." It takes two seconds. But that tiny action gets you moving. And checking off even the smallest task gives your brain a little hit of accomplishment, which makes the next tiny step feel easier.
The 25-Minute Trick
Try the Pomodoro Technique. It's dead simple:
- Pick one tiny task from your list.
- Set a timer for 25 minutes.
- Work only on that task. No phone, no new tabs.
- When the timer rings, take a 5-minute break.
- After four rounds, take a longer 15-30 minute break.
Twenty-five minutes is short enough that you can’t really argue with it. It creates just enough urgency to keep you focused. If a random thought pops into your head, just jot it down on paper and get back to work.