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Mathematics focuses on open-mindedness, and the advanced questions are a combination of several types of basic questions, so we should not be in a hurry, but should pay more attention to the basics.
The usual exercises and exams should be used as to fill in the gaps, and if you don't understand it, you have to stay up late on the same day to solve it, and don't accumulate it.
Pay more attention to the problem solving ideas of different reminders, summarize more, and then try to do similar questions yourself, which can basically be transformed into your own.
The method is boring, but it is very practical, and the mentality is calm, if you really fall in love with mathematics, you must be able to learn it well, force yourself in the early stage, and there will be basically no big problem in the later stage.
Good luck!
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It's not hard to say! First of all, I personally think you have to be interested!
Listen carefully in class (try not to get distracted, you may think that the blackboard is astronomical), and do your homework carefully after class! Don't plagiarize! Be knowledgeable in a timely manner!
If you don't understand, just ask (mathematics basically has new knowledge every day, and they all have a certain relationship, you didn't understand it last time, even if you listen carefully, you may not understand it next time)! It's easy for you to make a question that other students have been doing for a long time! You'll feel a sense of accomplishment!
Slowly you will get interested! Grades aren't a big deal!
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Look at what stage of mathematics it is, you want to do more problems in elementary and junior high school, and find a backer for non-math majors in college!! Don't worry, if you are a math major in college, study first, and you will naturally understand what you are studying now in a year! I am also from the Department of Mathematics, and I empathize!
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Practice on the basis of your understanding and find the right way to learn math that is right or suitable for you.
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The key is to be down-to-earth, to have determination, to have a firm goal, and the greatest determination produces the greatest wisdom. As long as you are down-to-earth and take it one step at a time, you will be fine. Also, don't be too eager for quick success, math learning is not an overnight thing, don't just start working hard and want to see results, stick to it. Hope!
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Learn mathematics to understand, understand in place, and secondly, interest is very important, you have to do more questions don't bother, targeted, you will definitely be able to learn well, you are still in high school or junior high school.
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According to my previous experience of studying mathematics, physics and chemistry (each subject has several perfect marks), my approach is: you should go from books to exercises, from simple to complex, from easy to difficult, from shallow to deep, and from slow to fast.
First of all, you need to read the book thoroughly, be able to understand the above knowledge points, and then do some relevant question types according to the knowledge points. As for going from simple to complex, it means that you first do questions that contain a single knowledge point, and can summarize the knowledge points, and then slowly transform to do a problem that contains multiple knowledge points. As for the slow to fast, it is a regular auxiliary practice for the exam, so as to buy time for the exam.
In the beginning, you should not pay attention to quantity, you should focus on quality first. Even if you do one in a day, as long as you do it right, you will still gain something, but if you do a lot in a day and it is all wrong, it will be in vain. After ensuring the quality of your questions, slowly speed up.
You'd better make a book of mistakes, classify the questions you did wrong, and summarize the reasons for the mistakes, and summarize the knowledge points to see if you have mastered them?
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Memorize more formulas and do more questions. If you can't learn too hard, you have to learn and apply it, and draw inferences from one example.
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First understand what is in the textbook. In doing some more basic questions, I will do the slightly more difficult ones.
The grades will gradually improve.
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I think it's better to get the formula theorem right, because that's the basics, and then let's practice a little bit more and do some typical examples.
Study the wrong questions again and use more snacks to listen to ...... wellIt shouldn't be a big problem, I don't know what math you're studying, junior high school, high school, or college, in short, you have to find a study method that works for you......
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Hehe, if you want to learn mathematics well, you have to practice more, do more questions, and have a feeling for the questions, but the premise is that you must understand each question.
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Study hard and make progress every day.
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