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i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
watiswati said:i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
I agree ... do hundreds of extra problems and everything will be in your brain ... org. chem is no diff. from other science classes (exp. bio in which you have to memorize, practice probs doesnt work here =P)medic170 said:Study a lot and work many problems outside of class.
practice problems can work for bio. It helped me in a recent exam in immunology 😳. Yes, there's a ridiculous amount of details in our exams.faradayampere said:I agree ... do hundreds of extra problems and everything will be in your brain ... org. chem is no diff. from other science classes (exp. bio in which you have to memorize, practice probs doesnt work here =P)
Blake said:This probably won't help, but orgo is like any course. Just study a LOT and do it frequently and you should be fine. I never understood the hype behind it. Physics is way more difficult than this, then again, it depends on the course/teacher. I thought orgo was more about memory than anything else, but that's just me.
Well, of course I had to understand some of the stuff, but our exams focused a lot more on reactions ( orgo 2 was full of this ). Memory became a huge factor in success, because there's just no ''logic'' in my opinion when you have to learn over 30 reactions for an exam. I honestly can't say I remember anything out of orgo.Brain said:This is almost exactly what I thought of orgo. My advice is to try to think through and understand the material rather than simply memorizing it. The first few chapters you go through will probably be basic reaction mechanisms (ie SN1, SN2, etc) and how certain compounds behave under various conditions. If you truely understand the basic material taught at the beginning of the semester, you should not have to do very much memorization and can think through almost any problem you're given. I only had to memorize 5 or so reactions studying this way. It really isn't a bad course, just keep up with it and you should be fine.
watiswati said:i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
watiswati said:i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
crysb said:i loved ochem. once you get the basic mechanisms down (like substitution, elimination) things came quite easily. for me at least.
it's amazing how repetitive orgo is in the sense that learning patterns really help you out. pay special attention in the beginning when you're learning the basics and i think the rest of it will come along just fine.
good luck!
watiswati said:i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
bgtati said:Find urself a study group 2-3 people with hardcore members...then sit down and do every solved problem/problem in the back of the book that is possible to do. make sure you have a solutions manual, and practice,practice,practice. Treat this class like your loved one and give it alot of time. Soon you will be teaching it to your classmates.
QofQuimica said:Here is a message I posted for another thread; you can read the entire thread here: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=164965
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I am an organic TA and tutor, and my advice to students is to approach studying organic like you'd approach studying a foreign language. Some students mistakenly believe that they can memorize their way through the course. But this is impossible, because there are an infinite number of possible reactions out there. You do have to learn the vocabulary and "grammar" (mechanisms) of organic chem, which requires some memorization. But the real test of fluency in these types of subjects is whether you can now take what you've learned and apply it to new reactions (or make up new sentences) that you've never seen before.
That kind of ability can only be achieved by working a lot of problems, just as learning to speak another language can only be done if you spend a lot of time practicing speaking it. Ideally, you should spend an hour every day studying organic if possible. Forgo re-reading the chapters in favor of working every problem in your book (yes, all of them, even the challenge ones) and really try to work them out yourself before reading your solutions guide. Ask your TA for help as needed, attend all of the problem sessions and classes, and go to your professor's office hours every week. Students that put in this kind of effort invariably do well come finals time. Plus you have the added bonus that the prof will actually know your name and can write you a letter when you go to apply for med school.
CarleneM said:I definitely agree with QofQuimica on it being like learning a foreign language. And other posters who have said not to fall behind. falling behind will be the kiss of death in that class. One thing that hasn't been mentioned is that your attitude about orgo can have a big impact in your approach and therefore your success. Don't think of it as an insurmountable killer class that is pointless anyway. Think of how many people have come before and succeeded in the class. If they can do it, so can you. it gets pretty interesting, at least it did for me, when i got myself more open to the idea that it could be interesting and manageable. I know it sounds cheesy but don't psych yourself out about it. Rock those syntheses!
Oh and i'm a psych major so if i love orgo (which i did) then so can you! physics, now that i hated....
Blake said:This probably won't help, but orgo is like any course. Just study a LOT and do it frequently and you should be fine. I never understood the hype behind it. Physics is way more difficult than this, then again, it depends on the course/teacher. I thought orgo was more about memory than anything else, but that's just me.
I've met people who enjoyed both, and who managed to always get 95+ on orgo and physic exams. I just couldn't stand physics. I stilll can't believe I made it to med school, considering how much I hated every single second of this. Oh well, it's gone now, and I sure as hell won't enter a residency where there's physics involved.Sophie said:Off topic (sorry, but I'm bad at O Chem, so I'd only be able to tell the original poster what NOT to do), but is there a line drawn between those who love Physics and those who love O Chem? I've talked to a lot of people who like one and hate the other, but no one who likes both. O Chem is the biggest nightmare class for me and I have to put in tons of effort just to get a B, whereas Physics is fascinating, fun, and easy.
Too bad I still have another O Chem class to take. 🙁 Good luck, wati.
Blake said:I've met people who enjoyed both, and who managed to always get 95+ on orgo and physic exams. I just couldn't stand physics. I stilll can't believe I made it to med school, considering how much I hated every single second of this. Oh well, it's gone now, and I sure as hell won't enter a residency where there's physics involved.
I didn't love maths, but I didn't hate it with a passion either. It was ridiculously simple (at least, at the pre-med level).mudphudwannabe said:I really enjoyed both physics and ochem..but..I'm a math major, so physics wasn't much of a stretch from that. As for ochem, I had a really great prof for first semester, plus I took it freshman year when I was still an overzealous studier. Both of them at some point made me feel bad that I couldn't study the subjects more in depth. Maybe it's just an issue of being interested in a lot of things. 🙂
watiswati said:i'm looking for advice from anyone who has done well in orgo, or is currently taking it....what are some good study habits/tips for orgo, what do i need to do well in such a challenging course?
Blake said:I didn't love maths, but I didn't hate it with a passion either. It was ridiculously simple (at least, at the pre-med level).
I'll go with the thinking option 😉mudphudwannabe said:But you could probably get the same thing from a philosophy class..or just by thinking. 😉
Sophie said:Off topic (sorry, but I'm bad at O Chem, so I'd only be able to tell the original poster what NOT to do), but is there a line drawn between those who love Physics and those who love O Chem? I've talked to a lot of people who like one and hate the other, but no one who likes both. O Chem is the biggest nightmare class for me and I have to put in tons of effort just to get a B, whereas Physics is fascinating, fun, and easy.
Too bad I still have another O Chem class to take. 🙁 Good luck, wati.