Good study habit increases chances of doing good at Physics?

AI Thread Summary
An engineering student pursuing a dream of becoming a physicist is struggling with academic performance despite a newfound commitment to studying. They find concepts easy to grasp but face challenges in problem-solving and applying knowledge, attributing their difficulties to a lack of foundational skills and years of minimal effort. The discussion highlights that many students face similar challenges as they transition to more competitive environments, emphasizing the importance of self-improvement and persistence. Suggestions include revisiting past material to strengthen understanding and developing better study habits. Ultimately, the focus should be on learning for the sake of knowledge rather than solely for grades or comparison with peers.
Drex C
I am an Engineering student but it has always been my dream to become a Physicist. So, I decided to continue on with my degree and extend my studies to Physics (I still have two years left in Engineering). However, in class, I wouldn't be whom you would be calling as "smart". My whole life, I did the least effort to "just pass", thus, my grades are not sterling. This semester, I realized that if I wanted to become a Physicist, I have to study hard. And study I did. Except I barely raised my test scores from when I barely studied. (10-20 point difference) In class, I do get the concept. Concept comes easily to me. I could explain to you how it works, but when applying it on a problem, I barely could.

Also, I've seen people (mostly girls) who I assume are very hard workers but just can't be at the "top". There's this one guy, who does not do any written papers AT ALL but manage to ace all the subjects and went on the compete nationals. He is interested in Physics as well and I sometimes think he's like Paul Dirac. Though not as quiet. Anyway, I am fascinated with him and I wonder if I could ever reach his level.

Anyway, Why am I not getting sterling marks now? Is it because I barely knew how to study before thus, I couldn't possibly change my habits in just one semester? Or is it because I really don't stand a chance when I put up work? Breaking my notion that if I just studied, I would've been at the top?

College has taught me lot of great things particularly of the fact that I am not as bright as I would like to think. This breaks my heart actually. Also, I think that my years spent on slacking in school has put me at a disadvantage because my foundation is not as strong as some of my colleagues. Maybe it is because of this? Do I have to relearn everything?
 
  • Like
Likes Zacarias Nason
Physics news on Phys.org
Drex C said:
I think that my years spent on slacking in school has put me at a disadvantage because my foundation is not as strong as some of my colleagues

My bet would be here - you have no experience in problem solving nor in learning, these things don't come from nowhere.

Hard to judge the situation from afar, but in my experience if you put an effort into learning you should gradually get better, accumulating experience. Just don't expect it to be a fast process. Plus, I would suggest going back and redoing things you were taught long ago - most likely you don't know them as well as you should, and this never helps.
 
  • Like
Likes Zacarias Nason and Psinter
Drex C said:
College has taught me lot of great things particularly of the fact that I am not as bright as I would like to think. This breaks my heart actually.

This is an issue the vast majority of scientists face down the road. Even geniuses like Tao and Serre have reported to struggle. So what you're going through is normal.

The problem is that most physics majors are always used to being the smartest. In middle school or high school, they were usually the smartest kid in school or up there. In undergrad, they might be the smartest too, but eventually it changes. What you're going through is normal. You will either learn to love science for its own sake and not because you're smarter than everybody else. Either you learn this or you drop out because you can't handle the competition.

This is the secret to success really: just compete with yourself. Try to be smarter every day. Don't look at what other people pull off. Just work as hard as you can. It's a hard lesson but one you will have to learn eventually.

Face it, you probably won't be the next Einstein or Feynman. But you can still learn a lot about the universe and even uncover some of its secrets. That's what you should do this for.
 
  • Like
Likes Zacarias Nason, dlgoff and Sophia
Borek said:
My bet would be here - you have no experience in problem solving nor in learning, these things don't come from nowhere.

Hard to judge the situation from afar, but in my experience if you put an effort into learning you should gradually get better, accumulating experience. Just don't expect it to be a fast process. Plus, I would suggest going back and redoing things you were taught long ago - most likely you don't know them as well as you should, and this never helps.

This is painfully true, particularly the bit about "no experience in problem solving nor in learning" - I think it's both easier to happen and harder to notice nowadays with resources like the internet at hand when someone has developed learned helplessness, because so, so, so many questions can be answered just by looking things up and finding previous discussion on the exact same topic. I am growing up during the internet age and never really knew the fear of having to think for myself if I "just couldn't figure it out". There are times when it's sensible to do this, which is subjective IMO because you have to strike a reasonable balance between the available time and effort you have to attempt to learn something on your own and times where it would be far too resource-intensive, for good reasons or bad, to learn it yourself and keep up with everybody else. It's hard for me to strike that balance between knowing when I should ask a question and continuing to invest time in a single problem.

I'm almost certain that I'm in the "learned helplessness" camp and am in your position now having developed considerably better study habits (just in the last couple of weeks, at that), but my fundamentals are weak and are hurting me down the road. Just keep trying, man! We can do it.

And honestly, I would try to "relearn" everything if you want to be stellar. I'm in the process of going through a couple OCW classes outside of uni. to do just that and am realizing just how poorly I understood these things the first pass I took, but the thing that's changed is that when I do learn something I tend to retain it because I have a way more robust way of note-taking and I don't just crumple up stuff and forget it or throw it away. I'm developing my own little tomes that may not read as helpful to someone else but are hugely helpful to me.

micromass said:
Face it, you probably won't be the next Einstein or Feynman. But you can still learn a lot about the universe and even uncover some of its secrets. That's what you should do this for.

I think this is true, but hey, he said "probably", right? ;)
 
Just ONCE, I wanted to see a post titled Status Update that was not a blatant, annoying spam post by a new member. So here it is. Today was a good day here in Northern Wisconsin. Fall colors are here, no mosquitos, no deer flies, and mild temperature, so my morning run was unusually nice. Only two meetings today, and both went well. The deer that was road killed just down the road two weeks ago is now fully decomposed, so no more smell. Somebody has a spike buck skull for their...
Thread 'RIP George F. Smoot III (1945-2025)'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Smoot https://physics.berkeley.edu/people/faculty/george-smoot-iii https://apc.u-paris.fr/fr/memory-george-fitzgerald-smoot-iii https://elements.lbl.gov/news/honoring-the-legacy-of-george-smoot/ https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/2006/smoot/facts/ https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200611/nobel.cfm https://inspirehep.net/authors/988263 Structure in the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer First-Year Maps (Astrophysical Journal...

Similar threads

Back
Top