Fall 2023

Get Stuff Done: A Guide to Managing Your Time and Being Productive

From the Set Current Topics by ReferencePoint

There is no shortage of obligations, pressures, and chaos coming at teens. How do you take control of it all and do what needs to be done? Get Stuff Done features keys to prioritizing, meeting deadlines, dealing with distractions, managing stress, and balancing work and fun.

Format List Price Your Price Qty
$43.93 $32.95
Interest Level Grade 6 - Grade 12
Reading Level Grade 6
Dewey Number 155.4
Lexile
ATOS Reading Level
Guided Reading Level
Language English
Publisher ReferencePoint Press
Format Reinforced book
ISBN 9781678206048
Copyright 2024
Number of Pages 64
Dimensions 6.5 x 9.25
Graphics Full-color photographs

Get Stuff Done: A Guide to Managing Your Time and Being Productive - Kirkus

Productivity tips compiled from secondary sources and delivered in accessible language.
This guide aims to inform young people of the reasons for their lack of productivity and how they
can improve their time management skills. Five concise chapters discuss the elimination of distractions and dealing with procrastination, two problem areas teens often face as they manage their busy schedules and technology use. Readers may find some helpful takeaways with recommendations to use productivity apps, such as a screen-time counter or digital planner. The author also presents strategies like the Pomodoro Technique, which involves setting alarms for focused study stints, or the Ivy Lee system of listing six things to do per day in order of priority. This overview of productivity ideas compiles findings from secondary sources, a few interviews with teenagers, and an assortment of blogs, news articles, and websites; actual primary source research studies barely feature. The images used are relatively unhelpful; they mostly feature stock photos of people of various ages and races looking at devices. The colorful but unlabeled drawing of a brain, for example, contributes little and does not support the portions of the book that discuss the significance of different areas of the brain. The writing style is informative but simplistic: The repetition of words like tough, challenge, and challenging may become monotonous to more sophisticated readers.
Some helpful tips buried within repetitive text and an uninspired design. (source notes, further research, index, picture credits) ( Nonfiction. 12-18)

Author: Terri Dougherty