- #1
lilypetals
- 12
- 0
Hello everyone. -waves- I'm new so...don't kill me or...anything like that, but y'all seem like nice people, what with the devoting-your-time-to-helping-with-homework questions thing. That's super cool of you. (:
So, I have this scenario, and I'm looking for some advice.
I failed my first Physics midterm. I'm a college student at Berkeley, taking Physics 7A, which is simply mechanics and wave motion. I have an okay professor, but the examples he does in class seem so much more simplistic than the problems that appeared on that midterm. The textbook is about the same; everything makes sense, even the examples they map out for you, but suddenly the problems at the end of the chapter and online in the ever-wonderful MasteringPhysics realm are dragons of horrid complexity.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to make it through this semester with a pass? Any resources that any of you have used to help you become better at complex problem-solving?
Thanks in advance.
So, I have this scenario, and I'm looking for some advice.
I failed my first Physics midterm. I'm a college student at Berkeley, taking Physics 7A, which is simply mechanics and wave motion. I have an okay professor, but the examples he does in class seem so much more simplistic than the problems that appeared on that midterm. The textbook is about the same; everything makes sense, even the examples they map out for you, but suddenly the problems at the end of the chapter and online in the ever-wonderful MasteringPhysics realm are dragons of horrid complexity.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to make it through this semester with a pass? Any resources that any of you have used to help you become better at complex problem-solving?
Thanks in advance.