There is a popular saying that history repeats itself. This means that when people fail to learn from the mistakes of the past, those mistakes can come back again. Reoccurring and making one a fool of oneself, this can happen in any situation and circumstances, either life approach or, most times, decision-making.
Using a failure to judge life is actually bad, but when it reoccurs, it's no longer a mistake; it's now a definition of failure. As mankind, we are all subject to making mistakes but never to repeating them,
using education as a point of contact. One of the most common ways students allow history to repeat is through carryovers.
A carryover is when a student fails a course and has to repeat it in another semester. Sadly, many students keep falling into the same trap because they do not learn from their past mistakes.
Considering how it may likely happen
Ignoring Warnings
Most times, students who carry over a course have been warned before. Either by test friend or even instinct, lectures may be stipulated to some exact time, but the laziness in them may avoid it. Many students ignore these warnings. They feel they still have time. They believe they can "cram" everything when exams are close.
But this is a mistake that has been made by many students in the past. When they repeat the same mistake, they get the same result: failure, as the popular saying goes, A failure to plan is a plan to fail.
Considering a case study for example, a student called clara. In her first semester, she failed anatomy because she never attended lectures. She always said, “I will start reading next week.” When the exam came, she was not ready.
Results came out, and of course, instead of flying colors, it's drowning colors, all painted in red.
This persisted for over two semesters until she was finally withdrawn from the university. Only then did she know and realize her mistakes and analyze them as such.
Bad Study Habits
She has poor study habits. She only reads when exams are near. She spends too much time on social media, chatting, watching movies, and going to parties.
So, when the same course came again, Clara saw she failed it again. seeing that the problem was not the subject. The problem was her refusal to learn from her past.the turning point she made but was too late for her was: checking all these
Wrong Circle of Friends
The people we spend time with can also lead us to repeat history. Some students move with friends who do not take school seriously. They skip classes together, waste time, and even help each other cheat. When one friend carries over, the others are not surprised. but even gives him a shoulder to lean on and a solid excuse for the failure.
What Can Be Done?
The good news is that history does not have to repeat itself. If at all, it does. Students can stop this cycle by taking some simple but serious steps.
First, students must learn from their failures. If you fail a course, ask yourself, “What did I do wrong? Did I study well? Did I attend classes?” Accepting your mistake is the first step to change.
Second, students must develop better study habits. Do not wait until exams to start reading. Set a timetable. Read in small bits every day. Ask questions. Go to tutorials. Use past questions. Change your approach.
Third, students must choose their friends wisely. Your friends can either lift you up or bring you down. If you stay with friends who encourage you to be serious, you are more likely to succeed.
Lastly, students should seek help when needed. Talk to teachers, older students, or even counselors. You don’t have to carry your problems alone.
Conclusion
Truly, history repeats itself when we refuse to learn from the past,
Many students keep making the same mistakes, and so they keep facing the same failure. But it does not have to be this way. If students are ready to change, to grow, and to be serious, they can stop history from repeating itself. The choice is in their hands.