kalstar
swag
Should I write notes or do past papers? Is it too late?
This made me laugh, are you for real! Cramming doesn't exist, unless you study consistently throughout the year, then just crammed the two days before the exam. Then yes, it works, but not studying consistenly, just cramming doesn't work. Think about, mate have you every crammed two days before, gotten above 90%, it is impossible, how can you remember all the information. You can't, people who says I crammed the night before, and got 90%, this wouldn't be true! The fact is that they study hard, know there concepts, content but doesn't want people thinking he study alot, lets do the same. if you don't believe go to anyone who is smart, right up the face and tell them do you study, see what they tell ( They will tell "I don't study" will you be dam to believe them, if you do then don't study and sit the exam, and see if you get the same mark as them who study hard getting 90%).it's no too late.. you can cram in your whole course in like 2 days
I heard its possible to do this in 2 weeks for all subjects. I'll be testing this theory out starting from next week...Should I write notes or do past papers? Is it too late?
It is true mate! but not for all you subjects in two, why simple cause there would be too much content and secondly you won't get much time to learn the content properly.I heard its possible to do this in 2 weeks for all subjects. I'll be testing this theory out starting from next week...
You're...This made me laugh, are you for real! Cramming doesn't exist, unless you study consistently throughout the year, then just crammed the two days before the exam. Then yes, it works, but not studying consistenly, just cramming doesn't work. Think about, mate have you every crammed two days before, gotten above 90%, it is impossible, how can you remember all the information. You can't, people who says I crammed the night before, and got 90%, this wouldn't be true! The fact is that they study hard, know there concepts, content but doesn't want people thinking he study alot, lets do the same. if you don't believe go to anyone who is smart, right up the face and tell them do you study, see what they tell ( They will tell "I don't study" will you be dam to believe them, if you do then don't study and sit the exam, and see if you get the same mark as them who study hard getting 90%).
your trolling, mate!
Cramming in two days is impossible, unless you prove you point!
This is true if you work hard.it's no too late.. you can cram in your whole course in like 2 days
Cramming an entire subject in two days IS possible. You don't have to have studied hard consistently throughout the year, rather you need to have a foundation of understanding of concepts and what the syllabus/rubric asks of you - THIS is usually developed through in class discussion and activities, NOT necessarily consistent study (notes, revision, summaries) throughout the year. HSC course content is not 'difficult,' there is just a whole lot of it with some stress slapped onto the side. I have 'proved my point' with many of my exams. I work hard in class and spend 6-8 hours the night before an exam reinforcing content/collating detail on syllabus dotpoints. (This might not align with your understanding of cramming)bsbsbsbsbsbsbsbs
Cramming in two days is impossible, unless you prove you point!
Not everyone finds the course concepts easy actually, this a common misconception amongst more intelligent students. Some people ACTUALLY have difficulty understanding things like mole calculations in chem at this late stage of the HSC, despite having worked on them consistently. And it is most definitely not possible for some people to do courses like english/maths extension 2, as has been discussed somewhere else in the past.Cramming an entire subject in two days IS possible. You don't have to have studied hard consistently throughout the year, rather you need to have a foundation of understanding of concepts and what the syllabus/rubric asks of you - THIS is usually developed through in class discussion and activities, NOT necessarily consistent study (notes, revision, summaries) throughout the year. HSC course content is not 'difficult,' there is just a whole lot of it with some stress slapped onto the side. I have 'proved my point' with many of my exams. I work hard in class and spend 6-8 hours the night before an exam reinforcing content/collating detail on syllabus dotpoints. (This might not align with your understanding of cramming)
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I think two days of intense cramming sets an appropriate trajectory for a good mark, but is that assuming the student already has a rudimentary understanding of the content? I think learning a whole module from scratch two days before an exam is unrealistic for sciences, but possible for easier subjects like legal or sor.My experience is restricted to cramming with the humanities, I can't speak for maths/science.
This is true if you work hard.
Cramming an entire subject in two days IS possible. You don't have to have studied hard consistently throughout the year, rather you need to have a foundation of understanding of concepts and what the syllabus/rubric asks of you - THIS is usually developed through in class discussion and activities, NOT necessarily consistent study (notes, revision, summaries) throughout the year. HSC course content is not 'difficult,' there is just a whole lot of it with some stress slapped onto the side. I have 'proved my point' with many of my exams. I work hard in class and spend 6-8 hours the night before an exam reinforcing content/collating detail on syllabus dotpoints. (This might not align with your understanding of cramming)
OP, it is not too late to make notes. Godspeed.
If your idea of writing notes is going to be exerting a perfectionist-like touch to every letter that is written, or ensuring you have over-answered the dot point so there's nothing else they can ask you on, you'll finish one module by Christmas.
Cut the discourse, go straight to the point, learn the key concept and do past papers.
nupThis made me laugh, are you for real! Cramming doesn't exist, unless you study consistently throughout the year, then just crammed the two days before the exam. Then yes, it works, but not studying consistenly, just cramming doesn't work. Think about, mate have you every crammed two days before, gotten above 90%, it is impossible, how can you remember all the information. You can't, people who says I crammed the night before, and got 90%, this wouldn't be true! The fact is that they study hard, know there concepts, content but doesn't want people thinking he study alot, lets do the same. if you don't believe go to anyone who is smart, right up the face and tell them do you study, see what they tell ( They will tell "I don't study" will you be dam to believe them, if you do then don't study and sit the exam, and see if you get the same mark as them who study hard getting 90%).
your trolling, mate!
Cramming in two days is impossible, unless you prove you point!
Not everyone finds the course concepts easy actually, this a common misconception amongst more intelligent students. Some people ACTUALLY have difficulty understanding things like mole calculations in chem at this late stage of the HSC, despite having worked on them consistently. And it is most definitely not possible for some people to do courses like english/maths extension 2, as has been discussed somewhere else in the past.
See:I think two days of intense cramming sets an appropriate trajectory for a good mark, but is that assuming the student already has a rudimentary understanding of the content? I think learning a whole module from scratch two days before an exam is unrealistic for sciences, but possible for easier subjects like legal or sor.
My experience is restricted to cramming with the humanities, I can't speak for maths/science.