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My exams will be in two months. I have four books, one exam for each book. Every book contain about 400 pages, every single page is included in the exam. Every test will contain about 15-20 tough questions.
My plan is to read all four books (one book at a time) in one month (read each book once) then the other month, I would study each book at a time by reading each chapter three times and answer some questions about that chapter. (I will have more time to study next month)
does this sound like a good plan to get an average score or not?

thanks in advance!

2007-03-31 14:36:17 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Standards & Testing

Oh, by the way, I have no teachers or anyone to help me.

2007-03-31 14:37:22 · update #1

I don't know how to take notes :D

2007-03-31 14:42:03 · update #2

how do I take notes?....I mean all the info I read seem to be important.

2007-03-31 14:44:45 · update #3

Thanks for the compliments :)

2007-03-31 14:46:03 · update #4

Thanks a lot rhumba! I'll try to train myself on how to take notes :)

2007-03-31 14:56:09 · update #5

5 answers

It's a very ambitious plan; that's for sure. It might work very well for you and get you higher than average grades.

Another alternative that you might want to consider would be to spend a little more time on your first read of each book by taking notes about each chapter or by outlining each chapter. Then you would have a record of the important points and might not have to reread everything-- just those parts that you need to clarify. I learn better when I write things down as I read. It just seems to stick in my brain longer.

You ask how to take notes-- if the book is a work of fiction, make a list of characters you meet and briefly describe each. Briefly summarize the story as you go. Jot down any questions you have about what you've read.

If the book is nonfiction, you need to decide what the important points are and then write them down as you read.

Whatever you decide, good luck. You sound like a very hard worker.

2007-03-31 14:44:37 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Get out a book on speed reading - Tony Buzan is ace
Find out what your learning style is
Find out what your learning mode is (MI)
(good book Accelerated learning in the 21stC

Take notes and test as you go

never study for more that 20 > 25 mins at a time - all the rest is waste

Take good breaks and relax regulery
Every run though of the work desolve the infromation into smaller notes

2007-03-31 14:55:21 · answer #2 · answered by Freethinking Liberal 7 · 2 0

You have a very ambitous plan. If you can arrange the time, it will work. I would suggest taking notes on your first or second reading and studying those instead of re-reading the chapter.

2007-03-31 14:42:38 · answer #3 · answered by the_gud_one 3 · 2 0

you extremely would desire to learn even nevertheless freshman 3 hundred and sixty 5 days in many situations would not count huge sort very lots, or particularly, that is not as significant as junior 3 hundred and sixty 5 days, you will desire to nevertheless improve your learn skills i think of attempting diverse innovations is a large way for you in sorting out what works for you superb i think of which you will desire to prioritize each little thing if i've got been you, i might learn for upcoming tests and for matters that I certainly have the main hassle on yet whenever you have time, that is sweet to study each little thing

2016-10-02 00:23:24 · answer #4 · answered by elzey 4 · 0 0

take notes on each as you read it too. Sounds good.

2007-03-31 14:40:57 · answer #5 · answered by greenfrogs 7 · 2 0

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