Wow finished JPNS10! Your Japanese must be really good. I'd love to do speaking practice but I've only done up to HSC Japanese Extension so probably won't be able to keep you entertained for long, before you have to start teaching me XD.
I think I know which one you are talking about :P
Back to the question:
I've only ever been to Matrix for chemistry but it really depends on the teacher... I personally found Louise to be awesome but Truc was a bit more relaxed... if you are really serious about getting high marks for your...
It is also important to practice all your homework (which will probably be the same style of writing tasks as the HSC exam), especially from the 2nd term of your HSC year onwards under exam conditions i.e try to finish each piece of writing within an allocated time:
150ji 20 minutes
400ji x...
Yes you should keep your analysis on soft copy and continually add to it as you keep discussing in class. The extracts prescribed for Okuribito are ridiculously long in my opinion though... much longer than Chihiro (previous text).
Remembering vocab is hard unless you continously use it...
That's actually not true... I know a few of my friends who are fresh high school graduates charging like $40/hr and that was for his family friend.... but they scored top ATARs (in this case 99.95) and are very knowledgeable in their subjects. Not sure about their teaching ability but still :)
Hey,
I happen to have attended the Mind and Morality course in year 11 during the school holidays (winter) because I wanted to see what studying philosophy was like but also you get a taste of what uni learning is about - i.e attending lectures and tutorials. Mind and morality is a bit...
Hmm, from my experience doing lots of trial papers is very tedious especially for chemistry extended responses as they are quite annoying to write out (especially in full sentences).
When I go through trial papers I like to just do dotpoints for the extended responses with brief summary...
Unfotunately, Bachelor of Applied Science will not give you the required pre-requisites to continue into the nutrition and dietetics course, which involves 2nd year biochemistry and physiology.
Basically, if you want to do postgrad nutrition and dietetics with applied science, the ONLY way...