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Gavvvvvin
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sparknotes are awesome
Thanks ujuphleg! Better start studying faster...at least I'm finishing reactinos in organic chemistry which is the worst part of what is my worst subject.ujuphleg said:My advice? Just do the best you can do, then you can ask nothing more of yourself.
As far as I was aware, you need to achieve at least a pass in all of your assessments to pass the course. I thought that was a University-wide rule. But obviously not!
Depends on subject. Biochem and chem require pass in both practical and exam, but most subjects will require passing the final exam unless there is some form of scaling.ujuphleg said:As far as I was aware, you need to achieve at least a pass in all of your assessments to pass the course. I thought that was a University-wide rule. But obviously not!
I'm in second year and I still use Sparknotes and other various searches from google. Trust me, it's the only way! lol Especially when the English lecturers spend the whole semester talking about the history of the poem/novel, when all you need to know is an analysis of the text!Malfoy said:Let's just say, Sparknotes will be my friend for English!
Fortunately it's not the case for all subjects/faculties I've already passed all my subjects, and since my exams are worth < 40% it wouldn't matter if I wrote nothing but my name and number on the first page. Well i guess it matters since I want a credit avgujuphleg said:As far as I was aware, you need to achieve at least a pass in all of your assessments to pass the course. I thought that was a University-wide rule. But obviously not!
Ha. Same. I was a supernerd for the HSC and thought I sunk to my lowest last yr when I didn't even study during STUVAC but left it til those 24 hrs gaps between my exams to cram a Semester's worth of work.hiphophooray123 said:well yeah because im beginning to regret all this procrastination, seriously i'm less motivated than last year even.
Amen to that. I managed to skip 10 pages of my history reader because I read Wikipedia, which was pretty much the same thing, only without all the self-obsessed academic rhetoric.hiphophooray123 said:i like wikipedia, it saved my life last semester, i basically just studied off that and got C's and D's for my exams
I have 2 35% exams (both for the same subject), 2 70% exams and a 65% exam. Fun.Skeeta said:like me!
fuck
my exam with the least weighting is 45%
then the rest are all 70+
and um
i want to cry
While that may be true, you can't deny that it encourages cramming, and cramming is never good. I mean, honestly, who does consistent study? Anyone? All I did was put effort into the assignments, and now it's come back to bite me in the ass.grk_styl said:they do that so you don't recycle information. So that you don't learn one text (or one topic for example) and write about it 3 times. That gives everyone the opportunity for a HD (and possibly, full marks). Since they have to have a certain amount of F, P, C, D and HD, they're not going to give everyone HD's.
BUT there's a positive in all this: it often means that you don't have to study a WHOLE semester's worth of a subject...often subjects only test you on half of what you have learnt! hooray!
You really encourage me. If a person who got a UAI of 100 can say that, then I could definitely be excused.c_james said:While that may be true, you can't deny that it encourages cramming, and cramming is never good. I mean, honestly, who does consistent study? Anyone? All I did was put effort into the assignments, and now it's come back to bite me in the ass.
I think my excuses have something to do with the fact that I'm just disillusioned by the concept of exams in uni subjects like history and philosophy. Historians and philosophers don't sit down and write their theses in 45 minutes or so, so why should students? Ah well, my tutor said something about them being done away with by third year...here's hoping.darkroomgirl said:You really encourage me. If a person who got a UAI of 100 can say that, then I could definitely be excused.
YES! Omg. Are you doing the same course? I'm trekking all the way to FISHER, for heavens sakes, tomorrow, just so I could scan through some of them. 'Essential' reading lists my foot, I think the tutors/lecturers are really disillusioned about how much free time we actually have (read: ZERO!) and how much of that time we devote to their course (stuff history, helloooo social life!).c_james said:EDIT: That 'essential' booklist you're talking about - that wouldn't happen to be for HSTY1025, would it? Because I looked at that thing and laughed.
I guess I do - technically, anyway. I stopped showing up to lectures after the one on Pirenne and sat in the tutorials with my arms crossed most of the time. Needless to say, she wasn't the most engaging woman. That said, I think I have a general idea of what's going on.darkroomgirl said:YES! Omg. Are you doing the same course? I'm trekking all the way to FISHER, for heavens sakes, tomorrow, just so I could scan through some of them. 'Essential' reading lists my foot, I think the tutors/lecturers are really disillusioned about how much free time we actually have (read: ZERO!) and how much of that time we devote to their course (stuff history, helloooo social life!).
I was about to complain about the same thing that you mentioned earlier... how they test us on things that the assignments didn't even cover. I thought the essay questions were way too specific, and we would've benefited better from questions of a broader nature, just to prepare us for the exam.
Oh, and Malfoy, Wikipedia was DEFINITELY helpful, especially with bigger topics like the Hundred Years' War, the Plague and Charlemagne. Oh, and also, you know the vacation readings (which I'm assuming none of us have bothered to look at)? They are actually really, really helpful, especially in light of the links that Julie was stressing that we should be making. Also, since you're focusing on religion, the readings on papacy and clergy are the most clear and explanatory by far in the booklet. Hope that helps