I just bombed my first orgo (I) exam...has anyone done terrible on the first exam and then turned it around and aced the class? Just wondering...Oh yeah, and if so, how?!
nico05 said:I just bombed my first orgo (I) exam...has anyone done terrible on the first exam and then turned it around and aced the class? Just wondering
ComfortableWolf said:I had a rough time with orgo at first- the most imporatant thing to reallize that it is virtually impossible to cram for- the way to succeed is to study a little bit consistantly every/most nights and do plenty of practice problems with out using an answer key as a crutch. I think this is why medical schools are so interested in the orgo grade... it is not necesarily indicative of brilliance but rather of persistance and the ability to memorize many seemingly inane rules and facts then apply them- much like learning a new language
Hope this helps

nico05 said:I just bombed my first orgo (I) exam...has anyone done terrible on the first exam and then turned it around and aced the class? Just wondering...Oh yeah, and if so, how?!
that's excellent advice, and very reliable coming from an organic tutor and TA 👍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.

nico05 said:I just bombed my first orgo (I) exam...has anyone done terrible on the first exam and then turned it around and aced the class? Just wondering...Oh yeah, and if so, how?!


Oh, yeah. I got a 59 on my first exam, a 94 on the second, and a 47 on the third. I ended up with the sixth highest final exam score though in a class of over 80. I studied my ASS off though. Do organic. All the time. Every day. MAKE FLASH CARDS. If you don't memorize some of the basic reactions (Grignard, reducing/oxidizing (like chromium - PCC or Cr2O7), acylating rxns, different benzene reactions, you'll never be able to do synthesis. Do mechanisms. Lots of them. The same ones. Repeatedly. And with slight changes. Repeatedly. If you can't do a hemiacetal/acetal mechanism in your sleep, then keep doing them.