Suggestions for Physics?

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BradenDO

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Hey all,
I just took my first College Physics test and I don't think I did so well. Do any of you know of any good books or computer programs to go along with the course?

Thanks for your help!
Braden
 
Get a book by Polya titled "How to Solve It". It leads you through how to solve almost any problem with a very sequential logical approach. Works like a charm - I know chem professors that recommend it HIGHLY to all chem and physics students.
 
Thanks for the suggestion! I'll definately check it out!
 
I already had my degree and then went back to take the prereqs for med school. I was married, and a "tad" older (24 ish). For both physics and chemistry...I went to the professors and talked to them about how serious I was. I asked them to supply me with the answers to the homework problems so I could be sure I was doing the problems correctly. In my opinion, there is no sense in "practicing" on homework problems and doing them incorrectly. So, I'd have the answer and I could work the problem until I got it correct. It took some convincing, especially with the physics guy...but he eventually did it. The chemistry guy had no problems with it at all. Also, at bigger book stores, there are problem books you can buy with answers. You have to look thru the books to make sure they are the level you want...but they do exist. I bought these for chemistry, physics, and biochem. I was not only studying for classes, I was studying for the MCAT at the same time, so learning the stuff was really important...I didn't want to waste time.

I can't really remember how we worked out my grades in those classes...perhaps went off the test scores alone, I don't know. However, I had one professor that said since he was helping me out, he would give me no higher than a B in the class - no matter what I did on the exams. I thought that was a good deal. I got an A...but a B went on my transcripts. However, that was fine, because it was more important to me that I understood and knew the stuff. Being a former teacher....professors/teachers sort of know which students are serious and which ones are blowing smoke. If you are serious, and you care about actually learning the stuff for the MCAT and not just passing the class and getting the work done...go talk to them and see if (if they won't give you the answers to homework problems that are assigned) - they will give you extra problems WITH the answers that won't be graded. I found the key to physics, chem, and biochem was PRACTICE and repitition. I am not a science nut by any means and I did extremely well.

Good luck.
 
BradenDO said:
Hey all,
I just took my first College Physics test and I don't think I did so well. Do any of you know of any good books or computer programs to go along with the course?

Thanks for your help!
Braden

I majored in Electrical Engg, before starting my med school. I took 5 semesters of Calculus and 4 semester of Physics. I eneded up getting A/A- in all of the above classes. During my 1st undergrad semester, I would read the physics books, see how problems were solved and try to understand the problem solving approach. Once I understood that much, I would move on to next chapter and so on. However, after the very first Physics exam, all my confidence was shattered when I scored barely above the class average. One of the things I did from that point on, was to solve each and every assigned homework problem. Sure it was time consuming and it involved lots of visits to TA and Prof. office hours, but ultimately it worked for me. I would also suggest one of the Schaum series physics book, which gives you plenty of practice problems of varying difficulty.
Physics and math are definitely tamable, if approached right.
Good luck.
 
Physics Demystified by Giblilisco. Worth the 20 bucks. I'll sell you mine if you want it.
 
Wow, thanks for all your suggestions! I went ahead and got a computer program called Physics Tutor Excaliber and a book called Physics Made Simple. I actually got my test back today and I scored higher than the class average...but that's not saying much since the average was 57%! 😉
 
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