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engineering maths,

2007-02-16 18:57:07 · 2 answers · asked by piyush 2 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

2 answers

Yes, there is.

LISTEN to the Prof. as he (or she) is giving the lecture. Write down what they say and copy their examples.

Ask questions if you don't understand something.

After class, 'clean up' your notes so they are legible and you can read then (and make sense of them). And do it as soon as possible while the lecture is still 'fresh' in your memory.

Read the explanations in your textbook.

WORK THE EXAMPLE PROBLEMS. The answers are given with the problem, but work every step of the problem to be sure you understand *what* was done, and *why* it was done that way.

WORK PROBLEMS. Math is like any other sport. The more you play it, the better you get at it.

If you don't understand something, ASK!! Nobody was born knowing this stuff. (Not even me ☺) It took us thousands of years to get where we are today and that's a lot of knowledge to cram into a few years at University. If you have a real question, ask a teacher or a classmate or post a question here, on Y! Q&A. Sometimes just having the same thing said in a different way by someone else is all it takes. (Being able to say the same thing several different ways is also the 'trick' to being a good teacher)

HTH ☺


Doug

2007-02-16 20:12:35 · answer #1 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 1 0

3 words Triple P: Practise Practise & Practise! If you want the shortcut, you just need to UNDERSTAND it DEEPLY and manage your time!

2007-02-17 00:42:00 · answer #2 · answered by ycling85 2 · 0 0

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