Hello I have exams coming up and I was wondering if any of you guys know where I can get some practice exam papers or questions that I can do or download from the internet. I am in year 11, high school, and I have exam on geometry and trigonometry, intro calculus, English and physics and chemistry. I am particularly looking for practice papers or questions on g&t, intro cal , chemistry and physics. I will be very thankful if you can tell me where I can get them.
And secondly, if you any good sites that teach those subjects I mentioned above, please post too. I really need these !
Thanks!!
Thank you for using the Jiskha Homework Help Forum. I'm happy to share with you some of my Exam sites. Most of them are AP and IB, Regents, etc. but hopefully you will find something to h elp you:
1. http://www.collegeboard.com/testing/ (College Board)
2. http://www.nysedregents.org/ (Regents)
3. http://www.regentsreviewlive.net/ (Regent Review = look to the left for the menu)
4. http://www.mo-media.com/praxis/ (some ideas for the Praxis exam are good for any exam)
5. http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-106161.html (Advanced Placement practice tests)
6. http://www.teacheroz.com/college.htm (Study Skills)
Jarin,
For future reference -- take copious notes in class. Read them ASAP and make any additions or corrections. Use them to study for the next quiz/test. Keep them. As exam time nears, go through the notes, weed out those facts you really KNOW and rewrite the notes using column style with a word/phrase on one side and a short answer on the other. Test yourself using either (and both)sides. Spend about five minutes EACH night on EACH subject for the two or three weeks prior to the exam going over the columnular notes. Start at the top one night, the bottom the next, then start in the middle. You can make several short columns to facilitate study.
When you get to the exam site, even before you write your name on the paper, jot down formulas, tough vocabulary words, abbreviations, etc. on a scrap paper. When you get to a question that requires that information, you will have it to hand.
Example: My study notes might read: Karl Weick ---- EUO = equivical messages (1+ possible interpretations, interpret information), uncertainty (not enough information), organization (processing information). My exam notes might read: Weick = EUO. That would be enough to spark my memory about the topic.