jg871 said:
mr said:
The place people tend to freeze is when they start a problem but do not know the correct way to solve it... it's like there is some force stopping you writing anything down and your mind goes all white and numb. Is that what you experience - thereabouts?
Yes, absolutely.
... I figured as much.
What you are experiencing is a form of fear.
Most often it comes from earlier in your education where you have been criticized or even punished for starting out on the wrong path r wasting paper or something. Maybe there is also an element of not wanting to look stupid in front of your friends sort of thing.
It can be hard for pin down - but it is fear all the same and you don't have to let it master you.
The first step in mastering a fear is to name it:
You don't like to write things down before you know what you are
supposed to write down.
It's like there's a wall in the way. You need to get past that wall.
The trick is usually just to start writing things down - anything: force your hand to move.
The first thing to do is reread the problem statement - every time you see a number, write it down and give it a letter.
You don't need your analytical mind for this so just switch it off - ignore it. It's purely mechanical: see number - write it down - give it a letter for a name - a machine can do it. There is no possible way to be wrong about this. You may miss some out - doesn't matter, you'll find out soon enough.
As you do this, a picture should start to form in your head. The part of your mind that normally worries and freezes you up will do this automatically once you start writing the list. So sketch out that picture.
(You may prefer to do it the other way around - whichever seems to come the easiest - i.e. if the problem involves a circle of some kind: draw a circle, that's easy! May turn out to not matter - never mind ... just start adding details as the description comes together - start drawing from the end of the first sentence.)
Once you've got a list of knowns and a picture, you need to give the unknown you need to find a name too.
Then you can switch that pesky part of your mind back on to think about the problem now it's all laid out neatly.
The rest is practice - the most important thing is to get used to writing things down before you know how to solve the problem.
It is the same for pretty much everyone who looks clever - they just hear about a prblem and immediately start working on the solution: it's like they have figured out how to do the problem within seconds right?
It's a trick - they have started work
before they know what the right way to do the problem is.
Often they have not seen what to do until they are about half way.
Good problems to work on for this skill are kinematics and ballistics - it is the main reason for making you learn them.
There's lots online and you can make up your own.
Remember, lots of people have had to do this before you.