Let’s not pretend that starting high school isn’t a big deal. It is.
You’ve gone from being top of the food chain in primary school to being back at the bottom — new teachers, bigger campuses, harder subjects, faster pace. And somewhere between lockers, bells, and trying to remember your timetable, you’re also expected to magically “know how to study.”
Here’s the truth: no one is born knowing how to study. But what you can do is build habits now – in Year 7 – that make everything easier later. Habits that don’t just get you through your first assignments, but help you actually learn, perform under pressure, and feel confident doing it.
Here’s what works. And what doesn’t.
💡 1. Being “Organised” Doesn’t Mean Owning a Fancy Binder
You’ve probably been told a hundred times already: “Stay organised!” But no one tells you what that actually means.
Let’s break it down.
Real organisation isn’t about colour-coded stationery. It’s about being able to find what you need, when you need it, and knowing what’s due — not panicking because you found a crumpled worksheet in your bag three weeks after it was handed out.
Here’s how to do it right:
- Use one folder (digital or paper) per subject.
- Label your work clearly: topic, date, what it’s for.
- Keep a weekly planner — not just for homework, but for tests, tasks, and time blocks to revise.
Don’t overcomplicate it. Organisation isn’t aesthetic — it’s strategic.
🧠 2. Studying ≠ Reading Over Your Notes
One of the biggest mistakes new high schoolers make? Thinking that “studying” means re-reading their classwork.
It doesn’t.
Studying means retrieving information from memory – testing yourself, practising skills, doing something active.
If you’re learning vocab in English, make flashcards. If it’s Maths, redo textbook problems without looking at the answers. If it’s History, cover your notes and try to explain the causes of a war out loud. If you can’t explain it, you don’t know it yet.
Study to remember, not just to re-see.
🕓 3. Start Small – But Start Early
You don’t need to be studying for hours every night in Year 7. But you do need to start developing the discipline of regular review.
Ten focused minutes a night is worth more than an hour of “studying” the night before the test with YouTube running in the background.
Start with these:
- Each night, look over what you did in class and summarise the key idea.
- On Sundays, skim your notes from the week — what stuck? What didn’t?
- If there’s an assignment, break it into chunks and schedule when you’ll do each part. Don’t leave it to the last minute. (No, seriously.)
📚 4. Learn How to Take Notes (Your Way)
In high school, you’ll get a lot of content thrown at you – and no one’s going to hand you a perfect summary.
So your job is to process the information, not just copy it down.
Good notes aren’t long – they’re useful. Try this:
- Write key terms in bold
- Use arrows or symbols to show links
- Underline cause-effect or problem-solution pairs
- Summarise at the bottom: “So what’s the point of all this?”
The best notes teach you, not just record the teacher.
🎯 5. Ask Questions – Even If You Think They Sound Dumb
This is the year to build your academic confidence. That starts with asking questions when you’re stuck – and refusing to let confusion pile up into full-blown panic.
Can’t follow the Maths method? Ask. Don’t understand the Science diagram? Ask. Not sure what “compare and contrast” actually means in your English assignment? You guessed it — ask.
There are no prizes for struggling silently. And the sooner you realise that asking questions is a power move, the faster you’ll grow.
🛑 Common Mistakes That Keep Students Stuck
Let’s call these out now so you don’t waste time:
- Leaving tasks to the night before: It always takes longer than you think. Start early and save yourself the stress.
- Highlighting everything: If everything’s important, then nothing is.
- Doing homework while half-watching TV: Multitasking kills memory. Work, then rest. Not both.
- Waiting until you “feel like it”: Discipline beats motivation. Every time.
🚀 Bottom Line?
Year 7 isn’t about being perfect. It’s about laying a foundation — building the kind of habits that make you the kind of student who gets results without burning out. You don’t need to be the smartest person in the room. You just need to be the one who works smart, early, and consistently.
So take control. Ask for help. Practise the skill of studying. And remember: you’re not just learning subjects. You’re learning how to learn.
📘 Want to learn how to study smarter, not longer? Book a free strategy session with an ATAR STAR tutor who gets it — and who can help you build a study routine that actually works.
Because Year 7 is just the start.
And how you start shapes how far you go.