kiannafirerose
New Member
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2008
- Messages
- 10
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- Female
- HSC
- 2008
what do u think about studying past hsc papers? do they help?
given the fact that it seems many trial papers and even hsc papers just keep asking the same things all the time i think it is really good to do past papers.kiannafirerose said:what do u think about studying past hsc papers? do they help?
I liked them because it gave me a good indication of the type of questions asked in the exams and the more I did the better because I there are many surprise questions and I like to be prepared for them.kiannafirerose said:what do u think about studying past hsc papers? do they help?
Studying past hsc and past trial papers (i recommend CSSA and NEAP) are the only way to go.kiannafirerose said:what do u think about studying past hsc papers? do they help?
what mark did you get for maths?BIGTYMA said:Studying past hsc and past trial papers (i recommend CSSA and NEAP) are the only way to go.
When i did the hsc i did the past 20 hsc math papers.
What maths did you do? 2 unit, 3 unit?BIGTYMA said:
i disagree. i found doing them in a relaxed environment taking as much time as i wanted best.Aplus said:Past Papers are most effective when used under simulated exam conditions, giving you a realistic expectation of how you might perform in the actual exam.
they are soo hard...my physics teacher uses them for topic tests...gahh i hate it.BIGTYMA said:Studying past hsc and past trial papers (i recommend CSSA and NEAP) are the only way to go.
When i did the hsc i did the past 20 hsc math papers.
Yeah, but in a relaxed environment you might go and look through your notes and stuff, so it wouldn't really be a realistic observation of your progress.me121 said:i disagree. i found doing them in a relaxed environment taking as much time as i wanted best.
the reason i did them was to learn the material and re-iterate it in my mind.
that said usually i ended up doing 1 timed just to see how i went with time.
if you choose to do them in time constraints, make sure when you finish you go back to questions you rushed or skipped and spend as much time as you need on them
Then you can do the exam without notes.Aplus said:Yeah, but in a relaxed environment you might go and look through your notes and stuff, so it wouldn't really be a realistic observation of your progress.
That was my point. Why else do you think I was rebutting his comment?kaz1 said:Then you can do the exam without notes.
It depends why you are doing the past papers. If you are doing them to get an idea how you would go if you sat the exam today then doing them under exam conditions is probably the only way to do it.Aplus said:Yeah, but in a relaxed environment you might go and look through your notes and stuff, so it wouldn't really be a realistic observation of your progress.
Omium said:Past papers are the best practice for every test. Textbook questions are always "styled" differently to HSC and trial questions.
You need to get a feel for the HSC and trial questions and the only way to do this is to do as many Past HSC and trial papers as possible.
I did about 40-50 2unit math past papers. and around 35-40 3unit maths past papers.
It really helps
I think that's a bit excessive. o_oOmium said:I did about 40-50 2unit math past papers. and around 35-40 3unit maths past papers.