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Struggling to focus at home? You鈥檙e not alone

Finding writing partners online can impose some productive accountability, says Alice Kelly

Published on
March 25, 2020
Last updated
March 25, 2020
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For many people, the next few weeks will be their first sustained period of working outside their normal working environment and the routine it imposes.

So how can we resist the distractions of 24-hour news and get some serious work done on that article or book? There are a number of free strategies and tools that I聽have been using for years to help me sustain focus at home. These employ some of the same techniques as the successful Academic Writing Group that I聽set up at the University of Oxford in 2015 to make early career academics feel less isolated and more accountable, through group motivation and peer support.

1. Find a Skype writing buddy. Once or twice a week, I聽meet my writing buddy at an assigned time to work together on Skype (FaceTime or Zoom can also work). We keep chatter to a minimum and encourage one another to focus.

Although there are a number of Twitter writing groups where you tweet your writing goal for a session with a hashtag, such as #suaw (the acronym stands for 鈥渟hut up and write鈥), I聽have found that the visual accountability of seeing someone else there working with me is what works.

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Rather than long sessions, the well-known pomodoro technique聽works best for us. This consists of short bursts of 25聽minutes, measured by a timer (it doesn鈥檛 have to be shaped like a tomato), during which we aim to achieve one clear, predefined goal, such as writing a difficult email, drafting 200 words or marking two essays.

Of course, your audience needn鈥檛 be confined to one person, and some online for isolated writers are already being set up.

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2. Use . This is like having a Skype buddy, but your buddy is actually a stranger who could be anywhere in the world and most likely isn鈥檛 an academic. Sign up for a free account and note your availability (sessions begin every quarter of an hour); you鈥檒l be paired with someone for a 50-minute Zoom session, where you share your goals and then mute for the remaining time, before checking in briefly at the end. In the past, I鈥檝e been paired with medical students cramming for exams, tech guys working on building apps, and even someone who meditated on camera for the entire session.

Having a complete stranger beamed into your home might sound intimidating, but this system particularly helps with accountability: you鈥檙e less likely to cancel an appointment with a stranger, and there isn鈥檛 room for small talk. The online scheduling can provide a sense of routine and achievement. Plus, you realise there are millions of people all over the world trying to focus, which provides some camaraderie.

This system is free for three hour-long sessions per week, or you can pay $5 (拢3.70) per month for unlimited sessions.

3. Try videos on YouTube. Inspiration doesn鈥檛 even have to be live. It聽can also be surprisingly effective to watch pre-recorded videos of people studying. YouTube is full of them, often featuring a student revising for exams, usually at or in locations such as the New York Public Library. They typically incorporate a timer, and music or background noise (obviously you can turn this off). Some are already being posted of people working in self-isolation.

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The enormous viewing figures of these videos are testament to their effectiveness. If you can get past the starting adverts for how to pass your GCSEs, they offer some accountability if you don鈥檛 like the idea of being scrutinised by a live human being.

4. Experiment with time management apps and internet blockers. There are thousands of time management apps available. If you like pomodoros, you can simply do the original method using a kitchen timer. But apps such as or allow you to keep a record of completed pomodoros, which can itself be motivating (my ancient app has a list going back to 2011). More fun apps such as grow a tree as you work (it聽dies if you break your focus).

Well-known internet blockers include , and 鈥 all of which have specific prices and capabilities (blocking certain websites, limiting time on specific sites, tracking internet usage). I聽use , which makes it impossible to access the internet for the times I聽have specified (9am-1pm), even if I聽turn the computer on and off again. I聽like the routine this enables. The first seven sessions are free.

5. Try creating a sonic working space. There are number of noise apps and websites that aim to boost concentration. I聽use , and I聽have trained myself (Pavlov style!) to associate the sound of rain with concentration by turning it on every time I聽start a聽pomodoro. Other people use (which allows you to put together your own sounds, from trains to birdsong), (which provides the background noise of a coffee shop), playlists or even YouTube of crackling fires. It鈥檚 about figuring out what works for you.

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Alice Kelly works at the Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford.

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Many struggle to focus at home: here鈥檚 how you can beat the slump

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