Studying for Science and Math
Saturday, August 29th, 2009Every year I work with science and math students who come to me thinking they just need help learning the material, without realizing that their main problem is that they don’t know how to study. They’re generally very good students who make the common mistake of assuming that the methods that work for them in history and literature classes will work for them in chemistry or geometry. In fact, these are such different classes that the same study habits rarely work for both.
So if you’re taking your first hard math class, or your first physical science class, here are some tips to help you study more efficiently:
- Know when to stop memorizing. Every subject in school involves some amount of memorizing. Sometimes you have to spend hours a night drilling dates and names into your head, and sometimes you just have to memorize the Central Limit Theorem. Memorization is a skill that will serve you all your life in some capacity or another, so don’t neglect it.
However, another important skill you need to learn is when to put down the flash cards and pick up a pencil and some scratch paper. In math and the hard sciences especially, there is just no substitute for practice problems. (more…)