quote:
Originally posted by Cremio:
Hi HermionicsCould you please tell me more about Green's study method? What is the secret, how does your plan look when you study?
The core of his method is to review a little notes day by day. Review 3 times. First time, refresh. Second time, recall. Third time, recite.
15 minutes each day for me to review all the notes using his method. I always master all the information with it.
With the "notes-mastery", I get A+ easily. Also, the more I read my notes on a quotidian basis, the less the time I will have to spend to comprehensively review for tests and exams.
Also, with this mastery, I can think about my materials much more deeply. Hence, I ace all analysis/interpretation/evaluation, as well as recitation (fill in the blank, multiple-choice, describe and explain, etc.), on tests in difficult classes, AP Politics, for example.
However, I never read notes for maths. The more I read maths formulae, the more they elude me. I ace my AP Calculus BC class with A+'s because I theorise on tests to get the satisfactory formulae or methods. Hence, I conclude that Green's method doesn't work for mathematics and applied science (quantum phyiscs calculations, quarks and anti-quarks, wave particles calculations, for example).