For sciences, scan through the multiple choices and then highlight mentally the long responses and take mental notes those you can answer and those you can't. As soon as the five minutes is up, annotate some information next to the question (what your answers going to be) and then circle those...
What I do is I scan through past papers; trials and look for those that are really difficult, beyond my comprehension and store them in a file.
So get your top 50 hardest trials you've ever seen (in terms of questions), including past HSC papers, and then randomise it!
New syllabus or not...
I beg the differ.
Taking down notes is equally as important as doing questions. Note taking needs to be fast and all it does is to help you remember the concepts right. Do not waste your whole two weeks reading and typing words out. Trust me that's exactly what I did. And it's no where near as...
Absolutely dreadful...
Conics was a killer, had me starring at the paper for a full 30min.
I think its a good thing. You don't want your mid terms to be easy. Learn from the mistakes and make sure you give your absolute best in ur trials and so on. Well at least, that's what i tell myself.
Just had my mid-year physics test, and everything that i've learned just escaped from my brain as soon as i started reading the question. Worst 2 hours of my life, bullshitting the whole thing. The word I'm looking for doesn't even begin with an s.
Word for word? Unlikely.
But you can familiarise yourself with it.
Start reciting paragraphs by paragraphs and write them down. Or treat it like a speech and actually present it, like to yourself in a mirror. 3 essays? can be done.
But still isn't it unfair. For instance, if my writing capability is 40 words per minute and the writer's 80 words per minute. And we're doing History right. I'll be able to take advantage of this, as we speak faster than we write.
You obviously have a lot of things going on with your tuition and all, but why don't you slow things down a little bit. In our school, we call year 11 the trial period, so have a bit of 'fun' while you're at it. Experiment with things, see what works for you. Use this opportunity to explore. If...
So you're telling me that if i break my hand on the day of the exam, i can hire anyone to write down the answers for me. How do they regulate this? Can't i just make the writer do the paper for me, and we'll have a delightful conversation while his at it.
Never came across this in my life.
Pls my ext1 is the same day with physics xD
Anyways yea drop it, if you lost hope in a subject no point in reviving it. You'll just waste even more precious time.
We have an 'acting' head of english, so no good there. She didn't hand out the criteria sheet before the assessment, and the guy didn't have a medical excuse, for 2 weeks he went overseas.
Yeah i guess you're right. If anything this motivated me a little, already started preparing for the mid...