To answer the topic of this post:
In A-School (the school where you learn the basics of your job rating (MM, EM, or ET) you will initially be placed on a mandatory study plan called MANDOS.
It is a 2 part system requiring an aggregate of required logged hours per week and also a minimum hours per day.
For example, if you are on 30-3s (Pronounced Thirty-Tack-Threes) it means you have to log 30 hours per week and a minimum of 3 hours a day Sunday through Friday.
Other combinations can be 15-0, 20-4, etc. at the descretion of your Section Advisor. It all depends on your attitude, grades, and whatever policy is set by the Class Director and what he delegates in turns of control to his Section Advisors.
As you progress and prove your maturity to your supervisors through your bearing, work ethics, and grades you may eventually be placed on Voluntary Hours (pronounced Vols (Valls)).
VOLS are great because you earn the flexibility necessary to have somewhat of a life and most importantly you can avoid coming in on Sunday.
ONCE you are in Nuclear Power School you go back on MANDOS and have to prove your worth all over again (Get used to this, because as a Nuc you will be proving yourself all over again for the rest of your enlistment).
But here is the trick, go on VOLS and if your grades or attitude slips you go back on MANDOS. Also, I found that logging 30-50 hours a week while I was on VOLS was like having a military bearing savings account. It meant when I did slip (at one point or another you are bound to f up somehow, my grades and logged hours kept the punishment at a minimum since what on Gods earth can a Senior Chief do to an MM3 with an average of 46 hours logged/week? But him on Mandos? Sure, go ahead.
So I basically logged about 900 hours during NPS and did not just sit there , but actually studied and did every possible practice problem offered in the manuals. As a result I graduated near the top of my class, got a great eval, etc, etc.
Moving on to Prototype: get used to a minimum 12 hour day. 8 hour shift and 4 hour study period either before of after shift depending on which shift.
Once you qualify your nuke rating/NEC you go on staff hours (8 hours/shift) or less depending on the needs of your crew, so qualify quick and get a much needed rest.
Ok now let's go back to the actual "HOMEWORK"
1. You will probably be assigned between 2-4 hours of homework per night or more. That's a gimme. Use your night duty instructors(NDI) if you get stuck. Log your visits to the NDI. That is also part of your military bearing savings account. "IF IT AINT LOGGED, IT NEVER HAPPENED"
Go to the NDIs, because your shipmates, no matter how gifted, are all retards.
2. Get a dry erase board approximately 2x3 feet and a big supply of dry erase markers. Use this to draw system schematics and memorize vocabulary and definitions over and over and over again.
3. Work on homework between classes and during lunch. I learned to get most of my homework done this way so come 1600, all I had to do was study and go over my homework. I also got in the habit of getting 2 problems done during class when the instructor was putting out notes or rambling on about the USS Used-to-Fish or something or when some retarded student was asking to go over some point for the 8th time.
Number 3 all boils down to effective time management.
4. Do every possible practice problem for any subject and keep these filed away for review. There are only so many problems to be asked on an exam. Most of the exam banks contain the same problems asked in different ways so it would behoove you to attack problems from as many different angles as possible.
5. Keep your mouth shut during study hours. I preferred to go to a no-talking area and study in a private cubicle. Many times shoot-the-shits develop in the classroom and before you know it you just lost 2 hours of your life with nothing to show for it. Save the shoot-the-shits for after you are qualified.
If there are disruptive trainees (there is always at least one) address the problem with the dipshit directly and professionally. If they tell you to f off, don't get mad, don't risk doing something stupid, just report them to your class leader ( a fellow trainee, kind of like the Boot Camp RLCPO (R-POC)) and if that does not solve the problem go directly to your section leader.
I think that pretty much covers homework and hours.
Good luck.
