Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

tips to study Chemistry

Answers

Answered by MAYAKASHYAP5101
3
▪️ Read all the equation ... and also learn it .

▪️ Practice daily .

▪️ Use study groups .

▪️Seek understanding .

▪️ Take good notes .

▪️ Always revise the equation and formula's .

▪️ Use Flashcards .

▪️ Break larges Taks in smaller ones.

▪️ Focus on Your work , not in Grade .

MAYAKASHYAP5101: please mark as brainlist
Answered by michaeljohnjohn85
1
Just doing lots of practice problems will not necessarily make you a better problem solver. You will never see an exam problem that looks exactly like a practice problem, so doing every problem possible is not a good strategy. Instead, when you work out a practice problem we have given you, make sure that you can explain why and when you would make each step in your solution. Be able to explain



why certain information is useful to you
why a piece of information might be unnecessary
what conversions you need to make so that
you can use information correctly
why you are using a specific formula
how you can rearrange a formula to find a new parameter
why you need to consider a particular reaction
when would you be able to make any assumptions you are making
what structures are useful to understand


Study more efficiently – not just more!



One of the first steps in coming up with an efficient study strategy is to assess what - in all of the things you are doing to study - seems to help you the most? What gave you the most confidence? If there are some things that you are already comfortable with, perhaps spend less time reviewing those and more time on concepts that are still challenging.Take some time to assess where are you having difficulty on the exams. When you get an exam back, retry all of the problems you missed (BEFORE looking at the solutions). Do you get farther then you did during the exam? Are you really able to finish them with more time or in a less stressful environment? Do you get stuck on concepts or definitions? on math? on starting the problem?Debriefing the exam helps you indentify the conceptual gaps that you need to relearn versus errors that may have resulted from test stress or a misreading of a question.If you can start to identify where/how you are struggling with the exam, then you can think about how to make better use of your study time as you prepare for the next one.
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