Moderator: Community Team
ParadiceCity9 wrote:I have my AP world history final tomorrow, then the AP exam on Thursday. Haven't really started studying. Any suggestions?
virus90 wrote: I think Anarkist is a valuable asset to any game.
Anarkistsdream wrote:ParadiceCity9 wrote:I have my AP world history final tomorrow, then the AP exam on Thursday. Haven't really started studying. Any suggestions?
Pray...
ParadiceCity9 wrote:Anarkistsdream wrote:ParadiceCity9 wrote:I have my AP world history final tomorrow, then the AP exam on Thursday. Haven't really started studying. Any suggestions?
Pray...
I'm not a believer.
virus90 wrote: I think Anarkist is a valuable asset to any game.
Anarkistsdream wrote:ParadiceCity9 wrote:I have my AP world history final tomorrow, then the AP exam on Thursday. Haven't really started studying. Any suggestions?
Pray...
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
firth4eva wrote:Hey, I need this advice too. Except for RE.
Wayne wrote:Wow, with a voice like that Dancing Mustard must get all the babes!
Garth wrote:Yeah, I bet he's totally studly and buff.
natty_dread wrote:I was wrong
Dancing Mustard wrote:
If you've got a few days, then get intensive. Re-make all of your notes on A5 cards, trying to condense the topics into the most concise form you can. Then scribe out questions on the information on the backs of the cards. The process of re-writing is great revision in itself, and then it allows you to cover/answer/check test yourself; which is magical stuff for the memory.
.
wrestler1ump wrote:I have found that it is better to pull an all nighter studying than to get sleep before an exam. If you know the material you know the material, and lack of sleep isn't going to effect how well you know the material.
natty_dread wrote:I was wrong
Wayne wrote:Wow, with a voice like that Dancing Mustard must get all the babes!
Garth wrote:Yeah, I bet he's totally studly and buff.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
btownmeggy wrote:It's probably too late for you for this school year, but follow my advice in the future and you will get into a great medical school, become a world-renown oncologist, and have a huge house, 4 cars, and a succession of wives that are always beautiful, young, blonde, and great cooks.
My advice for perfect grades:
Take super intense notes in EVERY SINGLE CLASS EVERY SINGLE DAY. The only time you should not be scribbling furiously is when you're making a very insightful comment that blatantly disagrees with what some 'tard in the class has just said, yet is clearly right and clearly in-step with your teacher's/professor's ideology.
Before tests, just read your notes two or three times. Maybe once the night before and twice right before the exam. Look over the required readings to have a few quotations fresh in your mind that you can allude to in open-ended questions.
Writing papers: If you have a more or less open-ended big paper at the end of the semester, start thinking of ideas on the very first day of class and continue for the next couple of months. At least one month before the paper is due, you should talk to the instructor about the idea you've decided on and then start an OUTLINE. Even if it's just a essay exam, dependent on a specific question or topic that the instructor has chosen, you should always, for every single paper, make an incredibly detailed outline. No single sentence should be up-in-the-air before you start writing, though you should accept that you will make some changes during the writing process. When the paper's done, check organization to make sure it's the best flow possible. If not, take a moment to realize you're writing on a computer. CUT AND PASTE! until it fits. Finally, read the paper aloud to yourself to make sure that sentences are simple and conversational (don't use my Chatter Box posts are reference points for simplicity and conversationalism!).
natty_dread wrote:I was wrong
ParadiceCity9 wrote:You guys know I'm only 15...right? It seems like you're talking about college stuff.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users