Conspiración
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http://community.boredofstudies.org/showthread.php?t=170103
Yup, I thought it was 2 units.
Yup, I thought it was 2 units.
.....Is everyone from Dubbo like this?ellie-maye said:Seriously...
GENERAL MATHS has 40% of the prelim content in the HSC. so...
DROP DOWN NOW...if you're doing crap at the beginning, you'll just do crap later.
I could have done 2 unit maths and got like seventies but i chose general and now im first with high nineties...
Ive watched people drop from 2 unit to general at the start of HSC...they're still doing crap even though it's meant to be easy... I seriously recommend dropping.
It just requires practice. No practice, then obviously you won't do well. It's not like English, where you read a text, memorise a few quotes, then edit your essays. Practice practice practice.foram said:if i dropped math, my parents would think i went insane from too much anime.
I don't understand why people can't get 80+ in 2U math, is it because you can't remember the formulars or is it that you have trouble with algaebra?? What part of math is difficult?
Algebra is sex. Geometry kills.foram said:you can't remember the formulars or is it that you have trouble with algaebra??
theres an easy method for factorising quadratics.Conspiración said:Algebra is sex. Geometry kills.
Remembering factorising is impossible, though.
Thats very true. But i learn things to a high standard before i start it at school, so at school i kind get bored a bit, and when ever the teacher puts questions up on the board, i can do them faster than anybody, and more correct too. Then lots of people ask me how to do questions and stuff, and somebody called me a 'math god', that made me feel very good. But it makes me very lazy at school, and i get over confident, and i end up loosing marks from things which are extremely careless. So don't get over confident even though you know everything.lisarh said:In my opinion, I reckon you should choose 2u math over physics. I have the most awesome physics teacher, but I myself find some stuff challenging.
BUT for now keep all your subjects and see how you go at the end of term 3. Remember, 'There's always space for improvement.'
SO, in order to improve your maths, I'd advise you to go over things a lot until it becomes 2nd nature to you. For eg, I learn most of the topics I learn at school at tutor first, so when I eventually learn it at school, I already get it, and then when its revising for exams, its like coming back to it for a 3rd time. So that's how I do well in maths.
I'd rather be over confident than knowing nothing .foram said:Thats very true. But i learn things to a high standard before i start it at school, so at school i kind get bored a bit, and when ever the teacher puts questions up on the board, i can do them faster than anybody, and more correct too. Then lots of people ask me how to do questions and stuff, and somebody called me a 'math god', that made me feel very good. But it makes me very lazy at school, and i get over confident, and i end up loosing marks from things which are extremely careless. So don't get over confident even though you know everything.
or you could use the quadratic formula works EVERY timeforam said:theres an easy method for factorising quadratics.
ax^2 + bx + c = 0
(ax + n) (ax + m)
a
where n and m are numbers that equal b when added together and equal to ac when multiplied together.
then you can factorise the top to cancel the "a" at the bottom.
It's the method i use, and it's that simple.