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Make your goals SMART: Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Timely

Students create 'goal posts' to give themselves a visual reminder.

So how are those New Year’s Resolutions coming along? Getting lean? Eating clean? Reducing, reusing and recycling? Managing the stress caused by not keeping your New Year’s Resolutions?

If only it were as easy to keep them as it is to make them. Although I have been known to say “I don’t make New Year’s Resolutions,” there are actually some lurking around the depths of my psyche collecting cobwebs. Most of them I do not care to share, in order to preserve my sanitized image, but there is one resolution I would love to tackle: I want to be a morning person.

I have come to accept that some people are early birds and some people are night owls.  I’m a night owl who wants to get in touch with my inner early bird. Morning people seem to have more patience, are less stressed out, and are more productive. They seem more cheerful too. Maybe it’s because they absorb all of the available sunlight. Try as I might, I can’t seem to make it out of the dark side. I have no excuse as to why I can’t because I know how to set attainable goals. I do it with my students all the time with great success.  

Right after my students go back to school after winter break and before mid-term exams, we work on goal setting. This year I had them make “Goal Posts.” This consisted of setting three academic goals, one extracurricular goal, and one personal goal. Once the goals were in place, we hunted through my enormous mountain of old magazines for visual representations of their goals. On a poster board, the students glued their pictures and wrote out their goals and hung them in their bedrooms. Now they have a fun, daily visual reminder to keep them on track.  

After the Goal Posts are made, students pick one goal to work on. Take the ever popular, “write in planner everyday” for instance. A student who never writes in her planner is going to suddenly produce a detailed account of all her assignments on a daily basis. That’s where SMART goals come into play. A SMART goal is kind of a template for successful goal setting.  

S-specific - answer who, what when, where, and why; break into smaller steps

M-measurable - establish concrete criteria for measuring progress toward the goal

A-attainable - plan your steps and establish a reasonable time frame

R-realistic - a goal must represent something you are both willing and able to do

T-timely or time bound - set within a time frame to create a sense of urgency

(www.topachievement.com/smart.html)

To use my early-bird goal as an example, instead of setting my goal as “getting up earlier,” which I know won’t work, I would try this:

Goal: Be out of bed by 6:45 every weekday. I will work toward this goal by getting up 15 minutes earlier each week for six weeks. Each time I add 15 minutes, I will also go to bed 15 minutes earlier in order to get enough rest.  

For the student who wants to write in her planner:

Goal:  Write all homework in planner every day by spring break. First, begin with a more attainable goal of writing in planner 3x a week for two weeks, then increasing to 4x a week, etc. Create a memory cue or reminder to write in planner, such as setting the phone alarm (on vibrate) when there are 5 minutes left of class.

Do you have any resolutions you want to be SMART about? Give this technique a try and let me know how it goes.  

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Robert Kalechman May 24, 2013 at 10:52 pm
Why is it that on Memorial Day or Decoration Day as my seniors refer to in Simsbury people forRead More political reasons always give the honor of the Memorial Day address and allows politics and politiiocians o use a solemn day that all veterans recognize as sacred? I have witnessed these politicians who look upon Memorial Day as jollow and in most cases refuse to serve in the Armed Forces and tookl the easy road of derferment after deferment? Over the years plaques, awards in my opinion have been bestowed on oficials who have done very little if anything to honor veterans, less than a decade ago these same elected officials closed the State Veterans Hospital at Rocky Hill thus taking away services needed by returning state veterans. Time and time again this state's politicians , particularly legislators, have taken away benefits deserved and awarded by a grateful state and nation. Case in point, the Soldiers, Sailors, Marine and Air Foprce Fund was taken away partially and put into the State of Connecticut's Geneeral Fund. Prison beds disgarded by the Department of Corrections were given to the Roky Hill Veterans Home and Hospital. I can present fact after fact showing the neglect and uncaring attitude towards the state's veterans budget which legislatores have been remiss in providing care to veterans as was promised. Why Simsbury's legislators are chosen to have the honor which they do not disserve? There is a bill before the State Legislatue that wants to stop the State Soldiers and Sailors and Marines fund being proposed by the Democratically controlled State Legislature. It seems that the Simsbury's lMemorial Day parades in past years have turned into ,meet. greet amd handshake that Simsubury's politicians use to further their political ambitions and garner votes which to the credit of a previous American Legion Commander who spoke out against political politicians who while marching break ranks to garner votes.Please allow my brothers and sisters veteans to honor our comrades who have made the supreme sacrifice and keep this State of ours above politics as ususial in Simsbury.
molly mead May 23, 2013 at 08:45 am
The article says it provides information about "various ways" the community can helpRead More teachers. However, it provides information only about the Staples discount program. The link takes you to a Staples website, not to a list of ways communities are helping. In addition, statistics given are national, not relating to Simsbury, or even Connecticut. This seems like a canned article designed to promote Staples. Was it written and submitted by that retailer?