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So our teach gave us about 5 pages of questions (times new roman, probably size 11 or 10). She says that not all the questions will be on our finals, but there isn't anything on final that isn't on the paper.

Anyhow, how should I study these questions? There are too many questions for me to be able to make flash cards.... so how do I do it?

2007-05-26 06:08:11 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

Um... this is for geography if this helps any.

2007-05-26 06:20:18 · update #1

6 answers

personally i would read through all of them first and isolate groups of questions. Certain ones that are more similar than others. Then I'd go through them and make sure i understood the answers.
Once I've done that I would figure out which groups of problems i knew the least and learn those first. Work backwards until either the final comes or you've gone through all the groups.

hope that helps!

2007-05-26 06:19:58 · answer #1 · answered by suggargurl302 2 · 0 0

what i would do is answer all the questions. even though it's a lot, its better to be safe than sorry. finals are a significant percentage of your grade, so getting a good grade is very important(esp. if yourgrade is borderline).
after answering all the questions, eliminate the ones you already know, since you dont want to waste time on the questions you are already familiar with.
what i would then do is study a few questions everyday. i`m guessing there's around 100(?) questions. so maybe study 10 a day, and make sure you know the answer thoroughly.
by the time your finals come, you`ll know all of them.
since it's too many to make flashcards(even after you eliminate), you can make a powerpoint to test yourself. put the qts in random order and just go through the ppt everyday.
goodluck!(:

2007-05-26 14:19:40 · answer #2 · answered by sushifureak 4 · 0 0

Here's another tip. Instead of just trying to memorize, actually write the answers out in your own words as you go along. But do it only on the questions in which you feel you need to strengthen your knowledge. This will actually create synaptic pathways in the brain which will help you when you take the exam. Obviously a mathematician doesn't have to memorize that 1 + 1 = 2. But he might want to memorize the formula for a Taylor polynomial, or the formula for the Law of Cosines, because they are more complex. By writing them out over and over again, he inculcates them upon his brain and finds it easy to recall them once they are needed. This same principle applies in any course of study.

2007-05-26 14:15:55 · answer #3 · answered by MathBioMajor 7 · 0 0

Study the questions you really had no clue how to do, or the answers.

Black out the questions you know.
Study the hard ones
and at the end, study the ones you pretty much knew

2007-05-26 13:14:02 · answer #4 · answered by Nohaymanana 3 · 0 0

hey so simple
just read each question carefully for 2 minutes and try to remember it in you mother tongue and the try answering that question.i always do like this and find it very easy to remember.
ALL THE BEST

2007-05-26 13:14:20 · answer #5 · answered by prettywoman 1 · 0 0

read it one-by-one.
then, just read it and read it over and over again. without attempt of memorizing it. then, eventually, u will feel like you're memorizing it already. just don't stop reading and reading those 5 pages over and over again. and while reading them, stay relaxed. :)

2007-05-26 13:12:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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