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Math Study Skills
Active Study vs. Passive Study
Be actively involved in managing the learning process, the
mathematics and your study time:
- Take responsibility for studying, recognizing what you do and
don't know, and knowing how to get your Instructor to help you
with what you don't know.
- Attend class every day and take complete notes. Instructors
formulate test questions based on material and examples covered
in class as well as on those in the text.
- Be an active participant in the classroom. Get ahead in the
book; try to work some of the problems before they are covered
in class. Anticipate what the Instructor's next step will be.
- Ask questions in class! There are usually other students wanting
to know the answers to the same questions you have.
- Go to office hours and ask questions. The Instructor will be
pleased to see that you are interested, and you will be actively
helping yourself.
- Good study habits throughout the semester make it easier to
study for tests.
Studying Math is Different from Studying Other Subjects
- Math is learned by doing problems. Do the homework. The
problems help you learn the formulas and techniques you do need
to know, as well as improve your problem-solving prowess.
- A word of warning: Each class builds on the previous ones, all
semester long. You must keep up with the Instructor: attend class,
read the text and do homework every day. Falling a day behind
puts you at a disadvantage. Falling a week behind puts you in
deep trouble.
- A word of encouragement: Each class builds on the previous ones,
all semester long. You're always reviewing previous material as
you do new material. Many of the ideas hang together. Identifying
and learning the key concepts means you don't have to memorize
as much.
College Math is Different from High School Math
A College math class meets less often and covers material at about
twice the pace that a High School course does. You are expected
to absorb new material much more quickly. Tests are probably spaced
farther apart and so cover more material than before. The Instructor
may not even check your homework.
- Take responsibility for keeping up with the homework. Make sure
you find out how to do it.
- You probably need to spend more time studying per week
- you do more of the learning outside of class than in
High School.
- Tests may seem harder just because they cover more material.
Study Time
You may know a rule of thumb about math (and other) classes: at
least 2 hours of study time per class hour. But this may not be
enough!
- Take as much time as you need to do all the homework and to
get complete understanding of the material.
- Form a study group. Meet once or twice a week (also use
the phone). Go over problems you've had trouble with. Either someone
else in the group will help you, or you will discover you're all
stuck on the same problems. Then it's time to get help from your
Instructor.
- The more challenging the material, the more time you should
spend on it.
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