Berkeley Review Physics question

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pinkcadillac

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I am getting a lot of questions wrong in the practice passages. Should I just continue to work through the passages and learn from the answer explanations? Any advice would be appreciated.

Thanks a lot!
 
Yeah, me too. I just review them after I get them wrong. Most of the times, it is just an assumption being wrong. I am glad I'm making all those mistakes while I'm practicing and not on the real thing. I think the most important thing is to familiarize yourself with each concept, and it just comes with practice.
 
I remembered for BR physics, I learned the most from doing the problems. The content review doesn't cover everything tested in its practice passages or I didn't get it from the review. I had to reference my textbooks and Kaplan to fully understand the answers to some questions.

Practice passages teach you very well.
 
Practice passages are training devices. You will mess up. Use them to point out your weaknesses NOW, so you don't have them going into test day. Make sure every practice passage you take is a learning experience.

General Guidelines for Reviewing:

- Go over EVERY question. Both the ones you got right and the ones you got wrong.
- Reviewing should take 2-3 times longer than taking the timed practice problems.
- If your tests are fluctuating, it is due to the different topics on the various tests. In other words, you have some glaring weaknesses that when targeted, nail you, badly. You have to find out what those weaknesses are because they are evident by your scores. Do NOT dismiss any wrong answer as a "stupid mistake." You made that error for a reason. Go over your tests again.
- You might want to consider making a log for all of your post test results where you work through the questions below. Doing so, you'll be able to easily notice trends.

Some things to go over when reviewing:

1. Why did you get the question wrong? Why did you get the question right?
2. What question and passage types get you?
3. How is your mindset when facing a particular passage?
4. Are you stressed for time?
5. Where are your mistakes happening the most? Are they front loaded? Are they at the end? All over?
6. What was your thought process for both the questions you got right and the ones you got wrong?
7. For verbal, what was the author's mindset and main idea?
8. Did you eliminate all of the answer choices you could from first glance?
ex. You know an answer should be a positive number so you cross out all of the negative number answer choices.
9. What content areas are you weak in?
10. How can you improve so you don't make the same mistake again?
 
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