Study tips for working adults
Studying when you have a job, a commute, and maybe a family can feel like a joke. The advice for 19-year-olds in a dorm doesn't cut it. You can't just "go to the library." The library is closed, you have to make dinner, and something in the fridge smells weird.
You need a different approach. One that works for a real life.
Your enemy isn't the material; it's the clock
You don't have endless hours, so you have to be ruthless with the time you do have. This means a real schedule, not a vague "I'll study Tuesday night" idea. Block out specific times in your calendar and treat them like a doctor's appointment. Forty-five minutes on your lunch break is a study session. Twenty-five minutes while water boils for pasta is another one.
I remember studying for a certification exam while working a soul-crushing logistics job. My breakthrough came at 4:17 PM on a Wednesday. I was sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic, waiting for my kid's soccer practice to end, and I realized I could use that dead time. I started listening to recorded lectures during my commute and reviewing flashcards on my phone. It's about finding the pockets of time that are already there.
But you also have to break the work down. Looking at an entire textbook is overwhelming, like trying to eat a whale in one sitting. Don't. Break every big topic into the smallest possible pieces. Your goal isn't to "learn marketing." It's to understand the "four P's." Then it's to define "product." Small, achievable goals create their own momentum.
A good way to structure these small sprints is the Pomodoro Technique. It’s simple: pick one tiny task, set a timer for 25 minutes, and work on that single thing with zero interruptions. When the timer goes off, take a 5-minute break. After four of these, take a longer break. These focus sessions are short enough to fit into a packed schedule, but you still make real progress.