Past papers or devote time to content for Trials? (1 Viewer)

Sxmm

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I've been getting mixed signals, between people who think that spending more time on really learning the content rather than doing past papers is better. And people who think that I should kill 2 birds with one stone and learn the content through trial papers - write down my mistakes etc. I see flaws in both sides, so I have no idea how to approach this.
 

MJRey

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Well I guess it wouldn't hurt to do a bit of both. But yeah, at the end of the day it's all about what you're comfortable with.
 

trubee

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For me honestly, I prefer rewriting my notes in my own words again to re-learn the content then practice some HSC questions on that particular syllabus dot-point. Whatever works for anyone!
 

dasfas

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I've been getting mixed signals, between people who think that spending more time on really learning the content rather than doing past papers is better. And people who think that I should kill 2 birds with one stone and learn the content through trial papers - write down my mistakes etc. I see flaws in both sides, so I have no idea how to approach this.
Learn by doing past papers. It is the single best way to study
 

pikachu975

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I've been getting mixed signals, between people who think that spending more time on really learning the content rather than doing past papers is better. And people who think that I should kill 2 birds with one stone and learn the content through trial papers - write down my mistakes etc. I see flaws in both sides, so I have no idea how to approach this.
Yea as someone else said in this thread it depends on how yourself and your skills. For me learning content was more important since I felt like I could answer any new question due to having pretty good exam technique and in-depth knowledge of the syllabus, whereas if I did past papers only, I'd be screwed as soon as a new question came up.
 

trubee

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It really depends on the subject. They won't ask the same essay question again twice...but practice on past HSC exam questions are a must to get some sort of structure going and to really drill in some key points and ideas into your head. For an exam based on short-answer, you want to know all your content inside out then attempt a past paper to really consolidate your study. In math for example, past papers are the way to go for sure and of course english, past papers all the way. Especially for the common module, the rubric is so important and it can really go a long way to understand the rubric and incorporate that into the comprehension short-answer questions in the common paper.
 

nourished.

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Obviously, some combination of the two will be the most beneficial.

But, if you're pressed for time, it's almost always better to learn content. You'd have a better chance at answering most questions. Now, your ability to craft excellent responses might not be the greatest, but it sure won't be as bad as most make it. Learning the content gives structure to your understanding. And structure to your understanding will add structure to most of your responses.

A cool thing about the way we learn is also this - tasks that require some sort of prerequisite understanding that you don't have to perform that task takes a lot more brain power than you think. For instance, you'll come across a question and its suggested answer, and find it relatively more difficult to follow along than if you had studied some of the content first.

Again, a combination of the two will be the best. But if push comes to shove, content first (except maths).
 
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