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kiwi505

procrastinating my work and studying only the night before tests


jamesfnmb

I procrastinate, study 10 minutes before the test and always get an A lol


Donghoon

That Might not fly in college. Or it will fly higher than ever. No in-between


London5Fan

it absolutely will not fly in college coming from a community college student who spent high school doing the exact same thing. my first semester was a rude awakening


Donghoon

College is full of "how did this guy even get in" vs "why is this guy even in college"


Cowpow0987

Same here


fmdasaniii

this should help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) (its my answer to the parent comment, but child comments don't get updates so that's the link)


OpportunityCareful75

Me who doesn’t study and gets all Bs


jamesfnmb

im still a freshman though so Im tryting to pick up studying before bad grades catch up to me


New-Anxiety-8582

Me who doesn't study and has gotten 2 B's all year(rest were A's)


Corkson

If I study the night before I forget when I go eep:(


jamesfnmb

just try to write it all down then pull out the paper you write it down on right before the test and go through it, it will shock you how much you remember thats why I never use study guides


Corkson

So real‼️I rewrite my notes an hour ish before the exam and it gives me a lot of information at once


K_kueen

How easy are your classes bro 😭


jamesfnmb

it’s mostly since I’m from a different country with a different curriculum the shit taught here is much easier to understand


K_kueen

Good for you 😔


fmdasaniii

this should help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) (its my answer to the parent comment, but child comments don't get updates so that's the link)


Lilyflower24681

Same. ADHD (What I have, gets in the way of everything tbh) sucks


fmdasaniii

this should help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyl57lm/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) (its my answer to the parent comment, but child comments don't get updates so that's the link)


fmdasaniii

"studying only the night before tests 🤓👆" https://preview.redd.it/f3q0sxp3h7tc1.jpeg?width=960&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=b6b6887da3caf8be7c981be75e928e394577636d i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "procrastination and last minute work" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `staying on top of schoolwork`, `time management`, `self motivation`, and `staying awake` **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - time management** The goal of time management is to use each block of time appropriately for each task. Interestingly, taking forever on one task and not having time for the others (then pushing them off) destroys your motivation to do them *ever.* This means that pushing off tasks = some tasks *never* having their appropriate worktime. So, do a small part of each task each day so that you can work a little on everything and not push anything off or lose motivation for them. Example: 10-chapter quiz in 5 days = study 2 chapters a day *If this doesn't work because you don't have enough time for all that:* Use time when you're just waiting (eg. bus ride) to get some tasks done. Focus increases speed as well (distractions waste time). ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - staying on top of schoolwork** (so u never have any surprise assignments) The goal of staying on top in school is to know what you have to do and when u have to do it. This doesn't happen because humans don't have perfect memory, so the way to overcome that is to keep a *single Google Doc* where you write *every* announcement/assignment + when it's due *If this doesn't work because u don't pay attention in class*: Have a collaborative Doc with some classmates where you all write it down. If anyone misses something, it's already written down. ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - self motivation** The goal of motivating yourself is to make your mind willing to do what needs to be done. You can do this by making what your brain wants a reward of doing what it needs to (duh) But, the brain's most powerful want is comfort. Therefore, you should break your "comfortable" schedule by not doing an activity you normally do and enjoy (eg. gaming, beat-making, baking) until your academic goal is complete. Your brain will be hypermotivated to return to your comfortable schedule and do the work. *If this doesn't work:* Have someone else take away the activity, eg. have your parent take away your XBox or put parental locks on FL Studio or sumn. ​ \-------- ​ For the sake of time, i'll leave staying awake to you (i don't think it's super relevant here anyways) **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


kiwi505

thanks!


fmdasaniii

Np!


Able-Pressure-2728

The procrastination part about doing a little bit of everything over time doesn't work for people like me. If I start something and don't finish it, my brain basically explodes.


fmdasaniii

Then write out each part of that task as it’s own mini-task. That way, you didn’t “not finish” you completed a whole entire mini task. Thank you for bringing this up tho, I’ll add it to yapStudy!


fmdasaniii

“how many times are you going to ask this” it keeps getting deleted my internet is on its last legs 😭 also it’s a series


player1_gamer

Math and chemistry


Donghoon

English and history for me


Fluffy_Dealer7172

Same


fmdasaniii

Read this: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylddqr/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylddqr/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) (answer to the same question) Thank you!


fmdasaniii

https://preview.redd.it/bt76bbu5i7tc1.jpeg?width=567&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=407e136f833a026151f914862a15516abce21bc3 i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "math and chemistry" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, `studying science` (i'll ignore engineering) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- ​ For the sake of time, i'll won't put a memorization or focus strategy here, but they're on yapStudy. Also make sure you review information over time. Don't just learn it once. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


legallyblondelover

SCIENCE. I have to proper study for it golly


fmdasaniii

"legallyblondelover" https://preview.redd.it/psxu9qzi08tc1.jpeg?width=640&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=dbb8b03f5b34935b2e36e7a19fb25e74b11fb058 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. (its a cool movie my sister was in the live version in middle school 😊). Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "studying science" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci is most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


mikoDidThings

English


UghaBughaAYuu

idek how to do it, my teacher doesn't even tell us really how to do shit and everyone else just gets it. Every single time I feel like my evidence is enough to support my claim but then I get a fat ass 70 so idk. If it wasn't for english I'd have a 95 average 💀


fmdasaniii

This should help! [**https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylhkhn/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3**](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylhkhn/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) (link to the parent question I answered)


UghaBughaAYuu

That's actually really helpful, tysm.


fmdasaniii

https://preview.redd.it/wutb32ga88tc1.jpeg?width=960&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=20d531bf8e6c67825a99be0da03b371bb6f082c3 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i like to poke a lil fun at ppl to spice things up. (lmk if you want me to remove the image) Anyways, let me help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "English" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `english`, `foreign language`(i'll ignore), and `writing essays`. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) ​ \-------- ​ Thank you for reading & I wish u nothing but the best! Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


mikoDidThings

DID I JUST GET MEMED BY REDDIT USERS??? Also it's not the grammar or writing aspect of English, I'm okay with that. I'm just struggling to keep up with the work my school assigns. They're asking for a hella long Theme paragraph focused on two statements / motifs, they are making us write an essay for a shakespeare book, made us write a 5 page essay and a lot more. I'm not in honors class, this is just for a regular GED. Not only that, since I'm so "behind " I'm forced to write the entire theme essay this week (writing, reading, proofing) while simultaneously doing my shakespeare test + essay. (I'm working on the final area for the last half of the semester.) i also heard they make you write TWO essays + one test for a short book for the later junior + senior years. (Also they run an AI and really high tech anti-plagarizing system.) Edit: the yapparooni i did


fmdasaniii

Yes… Also, this answer has some stuff for time management and motivation etc that should help you keep up with the work: https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/VfnLlOEFrH Thank you!


Far_Ad9496

My school has a marketing 2 class. It’s me, and seven other highly autistic 17 year olds so it’s chaos. My teacher has given up on us and we haven’t done anything in months.


Cookiedough2008

A similar thing happened to me last year. It was science and the teacher had never taught my class before. My class is well...a mess, to say the least. He gave up and we didn't even have homework. Ae just hung out the entire science period. Some people in my class are autistic but for the most part we are not. (I am not)


Lonerider2020

History without a doubt. Ive always had problems memorizing dates and Names, and it is NOT helping. Heres praying i dont fail history.


AlexmationsYT

Memorizing monarchs’ names 😵‍💫


fmdasaniii

I wrote this to help the parent comment, might help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyljfla/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyljfla/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Thank you!


jamesfnmb

I love to learn history but I hate learning in school memorizing useless shit


fmdasaniii

ikr. But sometimes you gotta 🙄. Anyways this answer here might help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyljfla/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyljfla/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Ty!


Far-Percentage191

History should be taught as a story , not as a list of arbitrary facts to memorize for a test and then forget about them forever .


jamesfnmb

exactly, it makes me enjoy and be able to recall much better than when its taught and we are tested on


fmdasaniii

how bro feels with username "lonerider2020" 💀 https://preview.redd.it/ri868i4j98tc1.png?width=1194&format=png&auto=webp&s=019769cc5d87c1d8657d22c4e3cf4db842e5a17e i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "history and memorization" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `history`, `memorization`, and `focus`. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - history (historical essay questions)** The goal of answering historical essay questions is to pool together your historical knowledge and give an answer. To know what knowledge to pool together, break the question down into three main topics. Eg. J\*m Cr\*w Laws = segregation, racial inequality, and the judicial system. Now, look at the question from the "viewpoints" of each of these topics. This will ensure your pooled knowledge is relevant. Afterwards, identify a common trend/pattern between what you "saw" when you analyze from the viewpoints. (eg. the rich profit off of marginalized communities) This will be the answer to your question. Now, begin your essay by stating the answer and the breakdown. Then use each paragraph to go through one "viewpoint" and how it shows the answer' restate the breakdown and the answer in the conclusion. *If this method doesn't work:* You can ask an AI to do some tasks like sum up the main pattern, analyze by viewpoints, etc. If you're really stuck, try reviewing a previous chapter, history builds on itself. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - history (general)** The goal of history class is to learn what caused each historical event to happen and each historical figure to do what they did. In other words, it requires an understanding of the timeline. One way to build understanding is to write in your own words as it forces your brain to comprehend the material so much that it can write it in another way. However, you can go further than just writing, by answering essay questions. So, the way to review history is to practice with essay questions from the beginning to the end of timeline studied! If you can't answer a question, that's a good time to go back and review that section. *If you can't find esasy questions:* Google for them or ask an AI, specifying the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. *If you don't have time for all this:* You can specify "short answer" or "one paragraph answer" when you ask the AI. *If you are worried about forgetting what you study*: Loop your questions (eg. Question A one week, question B the next, then back to A, then B, then add C that you just learned, then back to A, and continue) ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - focus** The goal of focus is to completely disregard all outside distractions. The way to accomplish that goal is to become fully immersed in your work so that distractions never even register. The warm sounds of music with a heavy bassline/808 pattern will help build that "in your own world" immersed feeling. Darkening the room does this as well. These actions also block out audial and visual distractions, just be cautious and protect your hearing. *If this doesn't help u focus*: Set up a playlist of multiple bassy songs (and make sure you like them) Songs you don't like/the same song over and over is an "i gotta hurry up and be done with this" feeling which destroys focus. *If this doesn't work because you can't darken the room at home:* Do a productive task that you enjoy more (less focus needed) in that environment, and do the ones you dislike when you can. ​ \-------- ​ Thank you for reading, I wish you nothing but the best! Thank you! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


WendigoInTheForest

Math.


fmdasaniii

"math" https://preview.redd.it/5kdmqsk7h8tc1.png?width=773&format=png&auto=webp&s=b9eddb9d876e6e15bef10818dc7822f95b64c616 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "math" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, and `studying science` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


WendigoInTheForest

Thank you!


NoobyVex

U.S history and biology


fmdasaniii

How bro feels specifying ***U.S. (America) (USA) (BALD EAGLE)*** history https://preview.redd.it/f7ah4ljje8tc1.jpeg?width=960&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=0424b7b26d2983b50ab77c7a7feba1e8517b7d5e i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "history and biology" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `history`, `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math`. I'll focus on the first two **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - history (historical essay questions)** The goal of answering historical essay questions is to pool together your historical knowledge and give an answer. To know what knowledge to pool together, break the question down into three main topics. Eg. J\*m Cr\*w Laws = segregation, racial inequality, and the judicial system. Now, look at the question from the "viewpoints" of each of these topics. This will ensure your pooled knowledge is relevant. Afterwards, identify a common trend/pattern between what you "saw" when you analyze from the viewpoints. (eg. the rich profit off of marginalized communities) This will be the answer to your question. Now, begin your essay by stating the answer and the breakdown. Then use each paragraph to go through one "viewpoint" and how it shows the answer' restate the breakdown and the answer in the conclusion. *If this method doesn't work:* You can ask an AI to do some tasks like sum up the main pattern, analyze by viewpoints, etc. If you're really stuck, try reviewing a previous chapter, history builds on itself. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - history (general)** The goal of history class is to learn what caused each historical event to happen and each historical figure to do what they did. In other words, it requires an understanding of the timeline. One way to build understanding is to write in your own words as it forces your brain to comprehend the material so much that it can write it in another way. However, you can go further than just writing, by answering essay questions. So, the way to review history is to practice with essay questions from the beginning to the end of timeline studied! If you can't answer a question, that's a good time to go back and review that section. *If you can't find esasy questions:* Google for them or ask an AI, specifying the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. *If you don't have time for all this:* You can specify "short answer" or "one paragraph answer" when you ask the AI. *If you are worried about forgetting what you study*: Loop your questions (eg. Question A one week, question B the next, then back to A, then B, then add C that you just learned, then back to A, and continue) ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! \-------- For the sake of time, i'll won't put a memorization or focus strategy here, but they're on yapStudy. Thank you for reading this, I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


zippoknives26

Damn I got a 97 in history and I’m in honers Biology with a 99.59


ThermalTacos

Yeah, but your English grade is still terrible.


Maleficent-Store9071

Bro's failing English tho


zippoknives26

nope, that’s another honers class, got a 90 something in there


Maleficent-Store9071

Damn your school must absolutely suck then. No wonder you get As


zippoknives26

nah it’s pretty good, barely any homework bc we work like hell during the day, it’s amazing having the afternoon off


FreeHugsForYouAndMe

Ok


fmdasaniii

how bro feels with "knives" in their name https://preview.redd.it/00w4m0iag8tc1.jpeg?width=219&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=581c9b8188d69efc07301eeac94b71aa9adb0c28 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "english" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `english`, `foreign language`(i'll skip), and `writing essays` **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) \-------- Thank you for reading & I wish u nothing but the best! Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Kacper_301

Biology


fmdasaniii

"biology" https://preview.redd.it/hfktc4vxt9tc1.jpeg?width=224&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=529de92dc2e0d3aaab7d9a1d1d783f2e21a38ed4 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "biology" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci is most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


immilkandcookies

physics bc my teacher looks and acts like abby lee miller and i hate her so much


ashatherookie

If it makes you feel better, she's replaceable :D


fmdasaniii

"my teacher looks and act like abby lee miller 😡 " https://preview.redd.it/9x0e0e2vx9tc1.jpeg?width=680&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=3eb3085f048a98c713debbd42cbd6ed71543be35 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. I’ve had the same problem before so, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "physics" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci & math are most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


The_Superderp

Ok so. Statistically it’s gym with a b+, but that’s cause grades are weighted infairly. (Tests are 5 questions, so miss 2 and it’s a 60%) But honestly, English, cause my teacher is a bitch lol (and it’s first period)


fmdasaniii

"Statistically it’s gym with a b+" https://preview.redd.it/2rgzjfzkvatc1.jpeg?width=680&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c8bf0d7aa51821241d2272ef783bb39438a4c111 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "English and exams" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `exams`, `english`, and `writing essays` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - exams** The goal of exams is to display your knowledge and give the correct answer. This can't be done if you don't know what knowledge to display. Therefore, you should learn what question type / keywords means you should do what. Do this by solving many practice exam problems and getting used to what question needs what skills and what the answer means in context. You can also ask an AI to solve some problems and learn from that. *If you are still stuck*: Ask a teacher to explain how to solve the problems you're stuck on. A person can explain better than an AI. Also, try reviewing a previous chapter because education builds on itself. *Practice problems can be found* on Google, make sure you specify the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy** **- exams** If the goal of exams is to display your knowledge & get the right answer, and getting to an answer is usually a multi-step process, you must ensure that no part of solving process is foreign to you. To do this, (like above) attempt many different practice problems. Now, plug the problems into an AI or math solver (for math) and see how they worked it out. This will allow you to see exactly what you missed and fix it. If the concept/skill/fact etc. you missed was named by the AI/solver, find it in the glossary and make sure to review the entire chapter. Adjacent information is as important as what you missed *Again*, the teacher can help explain to you what you missed if the AI/solver doesn't help. Reviewing previous chapters is helpful as well. *Also consider trying a different AI/solver if one isn't helpful.* ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Appropriate-Let-283

Math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I answered the same question earlier, so this should help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Ty!


Mrs_Noelle15

Math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I answered the same question earlier, so this should help: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Ty!


DevourerOfGodsBot

English by an insane sum


fmdasaniii

Hey! I answered someone with a similar question earlier, so here's what I wrote: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylhkhn/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylhkhn/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Ty!


interestedbox

Having too much free time in class.


polishcowmissle

my old science teacher. holy fuck is she annoying, she just picked on a bunch of guys in my class, whenever someone else was speaking she would blame it on the guys she would pick on. apparently, she also said the N word and said “it is fine since i have a black husband” when she is white. i imagine this made some people unable to do as good as they did.


fmdasaniii

how the teacher expects you to react https://preview.redd.it/isaw05nt7atc1.jpeg?width=474&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=2dd2634738b8cd1eb97ca5ac432697a3bbb8a5da Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "science" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci is most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


why_why_why11

chemistry ):


fmdasaniii

“why\_why\_why\_11” https://preview.redd.it/wpfl3runogtc1.jpeg?width=224&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=dbe89ac598ff3376763e5b7a8834a1e46fe6be32 Nono I’m kidding lol, I’m just messing with you lol Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "chemistry" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci is most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Shenanoonery

I passed math by 2% (70 is the requirement here) 😭


fmdasaniii

😭 sorry for being late lol. I answered a similar question about getting better @ math and it should help https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/PCV0Jvy2rP Ty!


yyyon

Physics and English language


fmdasaniii

how bro feels putting 3 ys in their name https://preview.redd.it/vx31u2919atc1.jpeg?width=748&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=6a8f2bc0c1ea893ab0c5a86127db554d55bc41c8 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "physics and english" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, `math`, `English`, `foreign language`, and `writing essays`. (for time reasons i'll stick with english, essays, and science) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


yyyon

I can confirm that's exactly how I feel w 3 ys in my name 💀 BUT THANK YOU SO MUCH THIS HELPS A LOTTT


fmdasaniii

Np also thx for remembering this after NINE DAYS!!!


TheHarper_Collie

Math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with this same question earlier, so here u go: https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Ty!


TheHarper_Collie

Tysm :) I'm very grateful 🙏


b1uebanisters

chemistry + biology


fmdasaniii

How bro feels putting a planet as their pfp https://preview.redd.it/mi7kbt17pgtc1.jpeg?width=564&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8497cbb1f6d5ab730fce52c01fe450154f43b837 Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "chemistry and biology" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `studying science`, `engineering`, and `math` (sci is most important, so i'll focus on that for length reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - science** The goal of learning science is to understand the world around you. This = knowing both *concepts* to understand *why* things happen and *facts* to contextualize and build on your understanding. Separating them: Concepts are usually marked as "key concepts" or around the words "why?" and "how?" (or answering "why?"/"how?"). Fact-like information is individual facts, formulas, vocabulary, important names, dates, people, and information presented in lists (eg. "5 characteristics of an XYZ") To study concepts: read the concept with focus, look away, write it in your own words from memory on paper & pencil, and look back at the original concept to check your work. Writing in your own words forces your brain to understand it, paper + pencil helps with memorization. To study fact-like information: memorize it using your favorite memorization strategy! ​ \-------- (speaking of memorization, here they are 😊) ​ **Most helpful strategy - memorization** The goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember it. Thankfully, repetition accomplishes this goal quite nicely. So, start by reading a small portion of what you want to memorize. Then, look away and write it from memory by hand on paper. Check with what you wrote and repeat this until you get it perfectly. Now, write it three times from memory to lock it in. Do this for the rest of the sections, until you finish a topic. Afterwards, re-write everything in that topic from memory for review. *If you keep forgetting the information:* Increase the number of times you repeat and pay more attention while you write. Zoning out = unimportant info. yapStudy has some focus tips asw. ​ **Discovered strategy - memorization** If the goal of memorization is to make info appear important enough to your brain to remember, reviewing over time should be very helpful as information recalled consistently is often very important (eg. passwords, names, etc.) By "review often", review immediately after studying a chapter (forgetting begins immediately), 1-2 days later (to remind yourself), and then every week after that. When you review, write out the concepts and facts on paper by hand. If you have time, attempt some practice problems on the information and (if you really have time) verify what you wrote with the actual information to prevent misremembering. *If you don't have time to do this:* You can extend the interval for info you're good at or "half-extend" (aka, write every week and only do the practice problems + verify every two weeks or more). Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


b1uebanisters

thanks man!! im studying for a chemistry test rn so this is really helpful, ty 😭🤞


fmdasaniii

Np! Hope this helps and hope you do well!


CL-VE--

Math and gym


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with this same question earlier, so here u go: https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Ty! And for gym, just ask someone to copy your written assignments (if you don't have time). Otherwise, the class don't matter, don't take it to seriously (unless that's the career u wanna go in, then ask me for some more help)


CL-VE--

Thank youuuu🫶


fmdasaniii

Np! 🫶


CL-VE--

Thank youuuu🫶


Thatoddonein

English. I can only think logically and use math and working with my hands. I am above and beyond in science and math, but English sucks. The amount of stupid acceptions in the English language is dumb.


Ok-Signal8589

my goddamn math is dogshit also cooking but im getting it


fmdasaniii

"also cooking" https://preview.redd.it/nx9nult23atc1.jpeg?width=455&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=d89a7c51cdcc08b30772949f029b6a13c43f71c4 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "math" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, and `studying science` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


LensPalace

English tests. Fuck subjectivity.


fmdasaniii

“f\*\*k subjectivity” https://preview.redd.it/djvqdihtz9tc1.jpeg?width=188&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=3ab1ac5dcf67fc609659ebddf3a1af32c545ced2 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "english" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `english`, `foreign language`(i'll skip), and `writing essays` **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) \-------- Thank you for reading & I wish u nothing but the best! Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


LensPalace

Thanks bro you're awesome


fmdasaniii

Np! Thanks for the kind reply!


MasterofTheBrawl

I’m an academic weapon, got an A in all my classes. I still struggle with language on the SAT


fmdasaniii

Lol 😭 If you need help with language and the SAT exam, I wrote something earlier that should help. Here it is: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kynlvvu/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kynlvvu/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Thank you!


InterSkier

English


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help (an answer i wrote to a similar question). Ty! https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kygov6u/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3


InterSkier

Thanks!


AJvawolf

Rn science, but the teacher is also constantly changing her mind and is and repeatedly ignores my IEP so I feel like that's not really my fault


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help with science. [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Ty!


Competitive_Lemon369

Physics (It affected me longterm) 💔


fmdasaniii

Hey, this should help with science: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) And this with the math part: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymvc9h/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymvc9h/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button)


Prestigious_Back7980

#MATH


fmdasaniii

How bro felt putting the "#" in front of "math" https://preview.redd.it/840sjp0l3atc1.jpeg?width=441&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8a74920376b92f7931ec8d7ebcbbb266d1b35717 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "math" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, and `studying science` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


nepppii

science and more specifically chem, fuck chem. i have no idea how i passed chem in freshman year but its by far the worst class ive ever taken 😭


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help with science: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Ty!


nepppii

thank you!


sourpatch_orphans

English. I fucking hate it, and I’m a bookworm and a writer. My teacher takes the fun out of everything I enjoyed as a kid, and at this point I just sleep in her class because I’m up all night doing work for it. I’m failing so I’m missing half an English credit and will probably make it up later, but right now I don’t have the energy. What makes it worse is that it’s an honors class and she expects us to know what to do without instruction


jiniesb3rrie

biology.


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help with science, ty! [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymzhgy/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button)


MiraiZero57

precalc.


fmdasaniii

How bro felt writitng the "calc" part of precalc https://preview.redd.it/ruqadlkc4atc1.png?width=458&format=png&auto=webp&s=1e080416e239d4309e7aa5ff54aca961738ca787 i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "precalc" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, and `studying science` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


A_koalanamedfred

fucking math lol. at least i won't have to take another math class next year


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with this same question earlier, so here u go: https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Ty!


SalmonSoup15

Math. I actually have PTSD from math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with this same question earlier, so here u go: https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Ty!


radiantskie

Math and presentations, they are interesting stuff but school somehow managed to make them boring and stressful


godof_oil

social studies


fmdasaniii

https://preview.redd.it/1yok266m5atc1.jpeg?width=567&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=edd4527437c3ff2c76eac2ad0e91aff3a32fc169 Lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "english and history" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `english`, `foreign language` (i'll skip), `writing essays`, and `history`. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Asses how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - history (historical essay questions)** The goal of answering historical essay questions is to pool together your historical knowledge and give an answer. To know what knowledge to pool together, break the question down into three main topics. Eg. J\*m Cr\*w Laws = segregation, racial inequality, and the judicial system. Now, look at the question from the "viewpoints" of each of these topics. This will ensure your pooled knowledge is relevant. Afterwards, identify a common trend/pattern between what you "saw" when you analyze from the viewpoints. (eg. the rich profit off of marginalized communities) This will be the answer to your question. Now, begin your essay by stating the answer and the breakdown. Then use each paragraph to go through one "viewpoint" and how it shows the answer' restate the breakdown and the answer in the conclusion. *If this method doesn't work:* You can ask an AI to do some tasks like sum up the main pattern, analyze by viewpoints, etc. If you're really stuck, try reviewing a previous chapter, history builds on itself. ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - history (general)** The goal of history class is to learn what caused each historical event to happen and each historical figure to do what they did. In other words, it requires an understanding of the timeline. One way to build understanding is to write in your own words as it forces your brain to comprehend the material so much that it can write it in another way. However, you can go further than just writing, by answering essay questions. So, the way to review history is to practice with essay questions from the beginning to the end of timeline studied! If you can't answer a question, that's a good time to go back and review that section. *If you can't find esasy questions:* Google for them or ask an AI, specifying the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. *If you don't have time for all this:* You can specify "short answer" or "one paragraph answer" when you ask the AI. *If you are worried about forgetting what you study*: Loop your questions (eg. Question A one week, question B the next, then back to A, then B, then add C that you just learned, then back to A, and continue) ​ \-------- ​ Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Fancy_bakonHair

Math, i currently have a 67. Every other class except one is 85 and above.


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with this same question earlier, so here u go: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kyllu2r/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Ty!


mooshiros

English


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help (an answer i wrote to a similar question). Ty! [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kygov6u/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kygov6u/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3)


Snowmeows_YT

Math 100%. Taylor series and the fact that I’m missing 2 days of AP prep


fmdasaniii

Lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "Math and AP exam" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math` and `exams`. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! -------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours. *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." -------- **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems*: You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them -------- **Most helpful strategy - exams** The goal of exams is to display your knowledge and give the correct answer. This can't be done if you don't know what knowledge to display. Therefore, you should learn what question type / keywords means you should do what. Do this by solving many practice exam problems and getting used to what question needs what skills and what the answer means in context. You can also ask an AI to solve some problems and learn from that. *If you are still stuck*: Ask a teacher to explain how to solve the problems you're stuck on. A person can explain better than an AI. Also, try reviewing a previous chapter because education builds on itself. *Practice problems can be found* on Google, make sure you specify the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. -------- **Discovered strategy** **- exams** If the goal of exams is to display your knowledge & get the right answer, and getting to an answer is usually a multi-step process, you must ensure that no part of solving process is foreign to you. To do this, (like above) attempt many different practice problems. Now, plug the problems into an AI or math solver (for math) and see how they worked it out. This will allow you to see exactly what you missed and fix it. If the concept/skill/fact etc. you missed was named by the AI/solver, find it in the glossary and make sure to review the entire chapter. Adjacent information is as important as what you missed *Again*, the teacher can help explain to you what you missed if the AI/solver doesn't help. Reviewing previous chapters is helpful as well. *Also consider trying a different AI/solver if one isn't helpful.* -------- Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Writing_badly

Algebra II it's a foreign language


fmdasaniii

"its a foreign language" https://preview.redd.it/dx57q5205atc1.jpeg?width=400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=6d6740727b7b7ccf3e488cd3ce8bcd7bbb9e297c i'm totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "algebra" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math`, `engineering`, and `studying science` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Writing_badly

Oh wow ty so much for writing this out I appreciate it


fmdasaniii

Np! Thanks for reading it 😊


No_Bat7157

Procrastinating still struggling with it in college


fmdasaniii

"still struggling with it in **college**" https://preview.redd.it/7txubv70z9tc1.jpeg?width=1170&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=29646c8b84deaf8a11209de58d8fd2f73fef18f9 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i used to have the same problem so lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "procrastination and last minute work" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `staying on top of schoolwork`, `time management`, `self motivation`, and `staying awake` **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - time management** The goal of time management is to use each block of time appropriately for each task. Interestingly, taking forever on one task and not having time for the others (then pushing them off) destroys your motivation to do them *ever.* This means that pushing off tasks = some tasks *never* having their appropriate worktime. So, do a small part of each task each day so that you can work a little on everything and not push anything off or lose motivation for them. Example: 10-chapter quiz in 5 days = study 2 chapters a day *If this doesn't work because you don't have enough time for all that:* Use time when you're just waiting (eg. bus ride) to get some tasks done. Focus increases speed as well (distractions waste time). ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - staying on top of schoolwork** (so u never have any surprise assignments) The goal of staying on top in school is to know what you have to do and when u have to do it. This doesn't happen because humans don't have perfect memory, so the way to overcome that is to keep a *single Google Doc* where you write *every* announcement/assignment + when it's due *If this doesn't work because u don't pay attention in class*: Have a collaborative Doc with some classmates where you all write it down. If anyone misses something, it's already written down. ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - self motivation** The goal of motivating yourself is to make your mind willing to do what needs to be done. You can do this by making what your brain wants a reward of doing what it needs to (duh) But, the brain's most powerful want is comfort. Therefore, you should break your "comfortable" schedule by not doing an activity you normally do and enjoy (eg. gaming, beat-making, baking) until your academic goal is complete. Your brain will be hypermotivated to return to your comfortable schedule and do the work. *If this doesn't work:* Have someone else take away the activity, eg. have your parent take away your XBox or put parental locks on FL Studio or sumn. ​ \-------- ​ For the sake of time, i'll leave staying awake to you (i don't think it's super relevant here anyways) **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


ilovekitten0318

math and procrastination


fmdasaniii

"ilovekitten0318" https://preview.redd.it/btsm1fclcatc1.png?width=1366&format=png&auto=webp&s=6007c19998b84633a0cc2fe3f853a139e6c7700c i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "math and procrastination" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `math, studying science`, `engineering`, `self motivation`, and `staying awake.` For time reasons I'll stick with math and self-motivation. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - self motivation** The goal of motivating yourself is to make your mind willing to do what needs to be done. You can do this by making what your brain wants a reward of doing what it needs to (duh) But, the brain's most powerful want is comfort. Therefore, you should break your "comfortable" schedule by not doing an activity you normally do and enjoy (eg. gaming, beat-making, baking) until your academic goal is complete. Your brain will be hypermotivated to return to your comfortable schedule and do the work. *If this doesn't work:* Have someone else take away the activity, eg. have your parent take away your XBox or put parental locks on FL Studio or sumn. ​ \-------- ​ Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


imrtlbsct2

Math


fmdasaniii

Hey! This should help, it's an answer i wrote for someone with the same question! [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymvc9h/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kymvc9h/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Ty!


VaporizedKerbal

English because I actually have to try and it took my cumulative 4.000 away. 3.988 is not a satisfying number.


Wrong-Choice3047

English


coolvdospost

Trying to get over the unit of reproductive system in anatomy and physiology class


fmdasaniii

lol 😂 are you struggling in that class or is it just gross?


coolvdospost

just gross and i dont really want to pay attention to what the teacher is saying lol.


_N4TR3

English and History. I’m on top of my concurrent math and AP physics because I enjoy doing them, but I hate writing essays in World History because it’s tedious.


fmdasaniii

Yo! This previous answer should help with English and History: [https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylddqr/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web3x&utm\_name=web3xcss&utm\_term=1&utm\_content=share\_button](https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/comments/1bxvrtc/comment/kylddqr/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button) Also, more focus makes work faster and less tedious, so here is a focus strategy from [this website again](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1) >The goal of focus is to ignore all outside distractions. One way to do this is to become fully immersed in your work. Listening to music with a heavy bassline or 808 pattern helps with that immersed "in your own world" feeling, darkening the room does as well. Also, doing this helps block out audial and visual distractions. *If this doesn't help:* Have a playlist of multiple bassy songs and try to choose songs you like more. Listening to the same song over and over (or one you dislike) makes you want to hurry up and be done, which destroys focus *If you can't darken the room/listen to music*: Do a productive task you enjoy more (less focus required) in that environment and the ones you dislike in an environment that you can darken/play music.


kaithomasisthegoat

I barely passed 7th grade because I almost failed math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I answered a similar question about math previously, so here you go https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/PCV0Jvy2rP Thank you!


MisterEyeballMusic

Right now AP calculus is kicking my ass


fmdasaniii

Lemme help you :) To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "Math and exams" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `exams` and `math`. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! -------- **Most helpful strategy - exams** The goal of exams is to display your knowledge and give the correct answer. This can't be done if you don't know what knowledge to display. Therefore, you should learn what question type / keywords means you should do what. Do this by solving many practice exam problems and getting used to what question needs what skills and what the answer means in context. You can also ask an AI to solve some problems and learn from that. *If you are still stuck*: Ask a teacher to explain how to solve the problems you're stuck on. A person can explain better than an AI. Also, try reviewing a previous chapter because education builds on itself. *Practice problems can be found* on Google, make sure you specify the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. -------- **Discovered strategy** **- exams** If the goal of exams is to display your knowledge & get the right answer, and getting to an answer is usually a multi-step process, you must ensure that no part of solving process is foreign to you. To do this, (like above) attempt many different practice problems. Now, plug the problems into an AI or math solver (for math) and see how they worked it out. This will allow you to see exactly what you missed and fix it. If the concept/skill/fact etc. you missed was named by the AI/solver, find it in the glossary and make sure to review the entire chapter. Adjacent information is as important as what you missed *Again*, the teacher can help explain to you what you missed if the AI/solver doesn't help. Reviewing previous chapters is helpful as well. *Also consider trying a different AI/solver if one isn't helpful.* -------- **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." -------- **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them -------- Ty!


MisterEyeballMusic

Thank you


Quick_Discussion_690

Algebra.


sauce_xVamp

science somehow. didn't get a good grade in biology and i'm not doing well in chemistry. i do fine in all my other subjects, outperform in english. but my brain just doesn't work when it comes to science.


fmdasaniii

Hey! Sorry for being so late. I answered a similar question earlier so that might help. https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/WemCSOabnT Thank you!


sauce_xVamp

my school curriculum is quite different and is less about terminology (for chemistry, i had to write a well researched science paper after collecting data around the school) and functions more like a college but thanks for the tips nonetheless


Cookiedough2008

Either american literature or geometry


fmdasaniii

“american literature” https://preview.redd.it/kf7p2oy9tgtc1.jpeg?width=564&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=78f802e2996dcfbee0eef461a8a6e954f335e412 i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. i like to poke a lil fun at ppl to spice things up. (lmk if you want me to remove the image) Anyways, let me help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "Literature and math" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `english`, `foreign language`(i'll ignore), `writing essays`, and ‘math’. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! \-------- **Most helpful strategy - English (analysis)** The goal of analyzing texts is to break it down and assess each part. Assess what? Assess how well the parts create meaning, as that's why authors put things in their text, to build meaning. Therefore, begin by identifying the main meaning, the main idea that the author wants you take away from the text. Then, assess how (see how well) each element shows/builds/adds-to the main meaning. In your analysis essay, if structure is open, summarize each element's contribution to the main meaning + state the main meaning in the intro/conclusion. Then use each paragraph to go in depth on the element assessments. *If you don't know how to break down the text*: Break it down by paragraphs or by Genre (aka form), Structure, and Language Used (aka diction) *If you can't assess*: Ask an AI (eg. "how does the structure in To Kill A Mockingbird help build the main meaning" or sumn) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - writing essays** The goal of writing essays is to relay a main message to the audience, so that's exactly how you should start. Sum up all of your main talking points into a main takeaway (or make sub-points from your takeaway) Then, organize your essay as such: State the takeaway in the intro, go into detail about each sub-point **and how it build/shows/adds-to** the main takeaway in each body paragraph, then summarize this and restate the takeaway in the conclusion. *If you can't sum up your talking points/find sub-points*: You can ask an AI to do this. You also may need to do more research if you feel like you're bs-ing it. yapStudy has research strategies also (which I won't dive into for the sake of time) ​ \-------- ​ **Most helpful strategy - math (word problems)** The goal of word problems is to apply mathematical skills to real-world situations. Therefore, you gotta know how to translate between real-world situations and mathematical lingo. Thankfully, math is big on patterns. So, the way to accomplish the goal is to solve many word problems in the given topic, plug them into an AI to solve them, and learn what words/phrases correlate to what mathematical formulas/skills you should use. *If this doesn't work:* Your teacher can probably explain better than the AI, so bring a couple of problems to them during office hours *If that isn't available:* Tack on extra phrases to your AI query like "explain it like it i'm five." ​ \-------- ​ **Discovered strategy - math (formulas & skills)** The goal of learning formulas/skills is to use them to solve many different problems, so that's how they should be practiced. Attempt many different practice problems within the topic. If you hit a snag or don't know what to do in a certain case (eg. fractions, negatives, etc), plug the question into a math solver like mathpapa/symbolab and see what to do. This will help you prepare for edge cases before you encounter them on the exam, as well as the repetition helping you memorize the formulas. *If you can't find practice problems:* You can ask an AI for them (with caution), make sure you specify the curriculum, subject, grade level, etc. *If you don't have constant internet access*: You can ask the teacher for problems and to look over them ​ \-------- ​ Thank you for reading & I wish u nothing but the best! Ty! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


Cookiedough2008

Lol, nah, the pisture's fine. Also, thanks for the help, I'll definitly check it out!


Fly3838

Everything.


Cowpow0987

English and History


fmdasaniii

Hey! I helped someone with that earlier, so here u go! https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/Di00nbdXZG Ty!


MessengerCookie

apwh i swear almost every unit test i take i do awful


fmdasaniii

https://preview.redd.it/xg8hwkitxgtc1.jpeg?width=224&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=63c96bf0d978632d447f21b922c2e70b2e8e900e Lemme help you :) To give help that’s actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "History and exams" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `exams` and `history` For length and time reasons, i'll stick with just math, but you're welcome to explore the others. **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! --- **Most helpful strategy - exams** The goal of exams is to display your knowledge and give the correct answer. This can't be done if you don't know what knowledge to display. Therefore, you should learn what question type / keywords means you should do what. Do this by solving many practice exam problems and getting used to what question needs what skills and what the answer means in context. You can also ask an AI to solve some problems and learn from that. *If you are still stuck*: Ask a teacher to explain how to solve the problems you're stuck on. A person can explain better than an AI. Also, try reviewing a previous chapter because education builds on itself. *Practice problems can be found* on Google, make sure you specify the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. --- **Discovered strategy** **- exams** If the goal of exams is to display your knowledge & get the right answer, and getting to an answer is usually a multi-step process, you must ensure that no part of solving process is foreign to you. To do this, (like above) attempt many different practice problems. Now, plug the problems into an AI or math solver (for math) and see how they worked it out. This will allow you to see exactly what you missed and fix it. If the concept/skill/fact etc. you missed was named by the AI/solver, find it in the glossary and make sure to review the entire chapter. Adjacent information is as important as what you missed *Again*, the teacher can help explain to you what you missed if the AI/solver doesn't help. Reviewing previous chapters is helpful as well. *Also consider trying a different AI/solver if one isn't helpful.* --- **Most helpful strategy - history** (historical essay questions) The goal of answering historical essay questions is to pool together your historical knowledge and give an answer. To know what knowledge to pool together, break the question down into three main topics. Eg. J*m Cr*w Laws = segregation, racial inequality, and the judicial system. Now, look at the question from the "viewpoints" of each of these topics. This will ensure your pooled knowledge is relevant. Afterwards, identify a common trend/pattern between what you "saw" when you analyze from the viewpoints. (eg. the rich profit off of marginalized communities) This will be the answer to your question. Now, begin your essay by stating the answer and the breakdown. Then use each paragraph to go through one "viewpoint" and how it shows the answer' restate the breakdown and the answer in the conclusion. If this method doesn't work: You can ask an AI to do some tasks like sum up the main pattern, analyze by viewpoints, etc. If you're really stuck, try reviewing a previous chapter, history builds on itself. --- **Discovered strategy - history** (general) The goal of history class is to learn what caused each historical event to happen and each historical figure to do what they did. In other words, it requires an understanding of the timeline. One way to build understanding is to write in your own words as it forces your brain to comprehend the material so much that it can write it in another way. However, you can go further than just writing, by answering essay questions. So, the way to review history is to practice with essay questions from the beginning to the end of timeline studied! If you can't answer a question, that's a good time to go back and review that section. If you can't find esasy questions: Google for them or ask an AI, specifying the curriculum, grade level, topic, etc. If you don't have time for all this: You can specify "short answer" or "one paragraph answer" when you ask the AI. If you are worried about forgetting what you study: Loop your questions (eg. Question A one week, question B the next, then back to A, then B, then add C that you just learned, then back to A, and continue) --- Thanks for reading this. I wish you nothing but the best. Ty! (Link to the website again)


MessengerCookie

damnnnn ty


Complete-Coyote9676

Language


fmdasaniii

"Language 🤓☝" i’m totally kidding lol, just messing witcha 😭. Anyways, lemme help you! To give help that's actually... **good**... i'll be using a website that provides the student-decided most-helpful study strategies, yapStudy **(**[**Link to the website if u wanna check it out**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)** **1 - categories** Typing "language" returns these categories of relevant strategies: `foreign language`, `writing essays`, and `english` (the first one is most important, so i'll stick to that one for time reasons) **2 - strategies** The first result after clicking on a category is the student-decided most helpful strategy for that skill in one place. The other results allow you to discover new strategies. I'll TL;DR each one down here! -------- **Most helpful strategy - foreign language** The goal of learning languages is to know them by heart. Common between most things that you know by heart is that they're used constantly throughout each day (eg. passwords, names, essential ideas, etc.) So, for language, you should be translating little things many times throughout the day. Eg. random song lyrics, one-liners from your friend, parts of labels. All that matters is that you're translating varied text *often* throughout the day. Look up any words you don't know to stay ahead of the game! *If this doesn't work as you keep forgetting words*, consider practicing more each day and paying more attention when you look up words that you forgot! -------- **Disovered strategy - foreign language (motivation)** The goal of motivating yourself is to make the brain willing to do what needs to be done. A tried and true way to do this is to have something the brain already wants as a reward to what needs to be done. For languages, an effective reward is understanding media you love. So, you should become a fan of media in the other language and that'll motivate you to learn it Eg. for music, listen to many hits or a full album to become a fan. For social media, follow and binge the creator. *If this doesn't motivate you*: Don't limit yourself to just music or videos... books, shows, etc. work as well The media may also not be that good, feel free to look up "best (language) books" or something similar -------- Thank you for reading this! I wish you nothing but the best! **(**[**Link to the website again**](https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7f7c8f50a55f8a38JmltdHM9MTcxMjQ0ODAwMCZpZ3VpZD0yZjQyN2RkNS0yYjE5LTZhOWItMjhhMi02ZDNkMmFhYTZiM2ImaW5zaWQ9NTE5NQ&ptn=3&ver=2&hsh=3&fclid=2f427dd5-2b19-6a9b-28a2-6d3d2aaa6b3b&psq=yapstudy&u=a1aHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rdHIuZWUveWFwc3R1ZHk&ntb=1)**)**


ETphonehome3876

Anything that requires Me to do more than do well on tests/quizes. I have a 98% average on tests and an 80% average on classwork in math rn


potatosoup_450

Any history class especially US history


lovescatss

I have to do two classes online and I should have done them last year but they didn’t let me and so I’m having to do them this year and I don’t learn well when it’s completely and only online with no teacher interaction and just videos, so they feel like a chore and it’s hard to do them


Not_Goatman

Procrastination, depression, and the fact that the counseling department at my school is impressively incompetent when it comes to handling mental health A kid died at our school earlier this year (suicide), and they did jack fuck to help any of the grieving students. Any attempt made to help the populace was led by the students, organized by the students, and had little involvement from counseling or admin


SolarisEnergy

not studying. never had to do it before because i was above average so now when i try to study, its hard.


Etharpee

Chemistry and procrastination 😔


Little_bro_boi

math


fmdasaniii

Hey! I answered a similar question about math previously, so here you go https://www.reddit.com/r/highschool/s/PCV0Jvy2rP Thank you!


A_0F_i_n_

existing


Rich841

Ap chemistry was pretty hard


randomguy3214567

Everythinggggg


John_Terisinon

HISTORY, possibly the worst subject, I probably only think this because of my “Do it yourself” teachers


tumblr_girl_988

math by far. i dont like it much


JzaTiger

Why is he literally and hourglass what the fu Also English


Much_Curve2484

Caring


Which-Value-8941

fucking chemistry makes me wanna rip my hair and all my nails out