1 / 9

How to Study for Dr. Maynes’ Chemistry Tests

How to Study for Dr. Maynes’ Chemistry Tests. And get A’s. Notes. You do take class notes, don’t you? Helps to remember the material Going over them refreshes your memory Use them in conjunction with the Unit Review Notes Makes sure you look at the most important stuff. Homework.

caroun
Télécharger la présentation

How to Study for Dr. Maynes’ Chemistry Tests

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How to Study for Dr. Maynes’ Chemistry Tests And get A’s

  2. Notes • You do take class notes, don’t you? • Helps to remember the material • Going over them refreshes your memory • Use them in conjunction with the Unit Review Notes • Makes sure you look at the most important stuff

  3. Homework • Review the homework problems • Some may be questions on the test • Take notes when we go over them • Ask questions about the ones you do not understand • Keep them in your notebook for review • Which is easier to do if you answered in complete sentences as you were supposed to

  4. Classwork • Introduces new concepts or provides practice • May provide another way to look at the material compared to the “lectures” • Again, a good source of problems for the tests • Since Dr. Maynes is available, this is a good time to get one-on-one help without giving up your lunch period • Keep Building Skills, Chem Quandaries and Modeling Matters – read over before test

  5. Labs • Not just a time to socialize and play • Often reproduced in some way on the test • Questions • Problems/calculations • Simulated data sets • Ask questions when returned • Save lab reports in your notebook • Review before test

  6. Quizzes • Quizzes highlight important stuff • You should expect to see it again • Sometimes the same question! • Sometimes re-worded or extended • Study the quizzes • Make sure you know what you got wrong and what is the right answer

  7. Dr. Maynes’ Review Notes • Designed to guide your study • Highlight important points • Suggests definitions to emphasize • Actually mentions 95 – 99% of material in questions on the test • If you don’t recognize and recall something you read in the handout, find time to ask about it

  8. The Book • You are expected to have read the Unit/Chapter • The best way to “read” a science textbook is to take some notes while doing so • Make believe you are making up “crib notes” on index cards • Then use the cards to study

  9. Memorization • There’s very little of chemistry to “memorize” • Most of it is relationships and logic • But memorize: • Certain few constants and key values • Names and symbols • Information available from the periodic Table on the wall and how to figure it out • Certain few mathematical formulas

More Related