The problem is the cambridge questions are sometimes/usually nothing like exam type questions loltommykins said:If you can do the majority of the Conics questinos (95%) in cambridge, how wouuld you fair in the final exam?
i disagree hav u done the further questions, they are exam-type questions if youv checked past hsc papers =)pLuvia said:The problem is the cambridge questions are sometimes/usually nothing like exam type questions lol
Yeah I read them f or abit then got sacred pretty much right away.rooeys2 said:i disagree hav u done the further questions, they are exam-type questions if youv checked past hsc papers =)
Speak for yourself Mr Maths.Affinity said:Conics is not very demanding conceptually... it's about how fast and patient you are with simplifying long expressions.
90% of questions on conics in the HSC are quite straight forward (but long) say, prove that some line and some other line are perpendicular, or find the locus of the midpoint of something.Slidey said:Speak for yourself Mr Maths.
It's been ages since I did conics (and even longer since I tried a harder question), but I'm of the belief that conics questions can be worded in pretty abstract ways.
They're word problems, so if you're not good at word problems, they can cause a right pain for you. Similar to mechanics, probability and circle geometry.
2008 paper is gonna be one of the hardest in this decade.solomarc20 said:I can never seem to come up with the answers to the last conics questions when I practise past HSC papers. The ones in Q3-4 r generally not hard, but yeah, the ones in Q7-8 r a bitch!!!!
Anyone who wants 2 feel better about conics, try the 2006 MX2 paper, the conics questions r really straightforward!
Fingers crossed for the 2008 paper!!!
But it being hard shouldn't have that much of an effect, I mean if I'm struggling, so is (in general) the state.YannY said:2008 paper is gonna be one of the hardest in this decade.
My prediction is, they always follow the simple ones to give students a shock.