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Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Tips Study Mathematics Blog: Math Study Tips for your HSC (Eww ...

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<b>Tips Study Mathematics</b> Blog: Math Study Tips for your HSC (Eww <b>...</b>


<b>Tips Study Mathematics</b> Blog: Math Study Tips for your HSC (Eww <b>...</b>

Posted: 12 Jan 2014 07:43 AM PST

"A mathematician is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat which isn't     there."                                                                                       –   Charles Darwin

"A mathematical pun is the first sine of madness."                                  - Anonymous

Tetris is more fun than math.

The word "mathematics" has been threatening students for centuries. To help prevent common pre-exam symptoms of shock and horror, I've provided you with some CRUCIAL tips which will make your HSC less intimidating and ultimately help you achieve that outstanding test score.

What to expect. The paper will be out of a total of 100 marks, marks that will be harder to get as you progress (so don't get cocky at the beginning and zone out).

Take all the help you can get. There will be a list of Standard Integrals attached to your question booklet, so use it. Attempting to guess them when they are delivered to you is completely idiotic.

What's up for grabs?  The more marks a question is worth, the more love and devotion you should be showing it. If a question is worth more than one mark, you will be required to show your work for it. So show your work for it.

Calculator at the ready. Figure out if it's DEG or RAD you want to use and then make sure your calculator is in the right mode! There's nothing more upsetting than completing an exam and realising that every answer will be wrong because of your failure to press buttons correctly.

Find x

Basic steps. There is no point in doing the work if you're not actually answering the question. Read each question carefully, more than once if necessary. Write down the formula you are using for each question before you dive into equating and calculating willy-nilly.

Don't undo. Don't go wild with the eraser if you think something's wrong – you can still get marks for showing your work if you're demonstrating correct problem solving methods. Leave all your scribbling behind as proof that you do (if only partially) know what you're doing.

Re-check. Once you have completed every question, go back and check each one carefully, making sure you've answered all the components of a question. Use your calculator to re-trace your problem-solving steps and make sure you come up with the same solution. If you don't, you've got a little detective work to do to find out where you strayed from the path of correctness.

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<b>Tips Study Mathematics</b> Blog: Math Tutor – West Hills – Online and <b>...</b>

Posted: 16 Jan 2014 07:36 AM PST

Students who are successful in other subjects often have difficulty with math. Reasons vary from one person to the next. Some suffer from math anxiety or have a math phobia, but for most it's a matter of not knowing how to study math.

Math anxiety is one of the most frustrating obstacles to math success. A student may do all the "right" things—work hard, pay attention in class, do homework—and still not perform well on tests and quizzes. An internalized notion of "I can't do math" prevents these students from being successful. Andmathtutoring.com has some excellent tips and information about how to cope with math anxiety.

A major reason many students don't succeed in math is because they lack good study skills. Students tend to study math the same way they study other subjects. But math requires the use of analytic reasoning and critical thinking skills. It's not enough to just read and understand concepts—students must also be able to apply those concepts to solve problems. Andmathtutoring.com is an excellent online resource that provides some very specific guidelines about how to study math and do math homework.

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