I am dead serious, most of my teachers believe in not giving homework, and that we need to develope our own study habbitsmore like you have never done it
I am dead serious, most of my teachers believe in not giving homework, and that we need to develope our own study habbitsmore like you have never done it
If you have been able to develop independent learning skills and the discipline to study on your own without teachers giving you homework - this will serve you very well in uni.I am dead serious, most of my teachers believe in not giving homework, and that we need to develope our own study habbits
My teachers believe in giving heaps of homework because the classroom is for learning and conversation and then you go over everything in more detail at home... well, we're supposed to.I am dead serious, most of my teachers believe in not giving homework, and that we need to develope our own study habbits
I swear to god, I never did any of my English, Maths and Chemistry homework from school. Physics, I had to, because my teacher checked, and it was part of the assessables. However for Chem, I pretty much did the prac reports (because they were vaguely important), and also, I just learnt the theory from tutor, and accordingly did past papers. English - I never did the bullshit homework that involved: "Here's a list of questions to test your comprehension of Frankenstein" - I just wrote practice essays, and practice creative writing. Maths......yeah, just did past papers the entire year - never really did homework.My teachers believe in giving heaps of homework because the classroom is for learning and conversation and then you go over everything in more detail at home... well, we're supposed to.
Me too... I don't get why some people place more emphasis on homework over assessments. Homework has never been a top priority for me and it will never be.^ Learn from the best, kids.
I feel relieved now, I rarely do school homework for English, Chem or Physics. Though I do the homework for tuition, not to upset the teacher lol.
Per week does seem reasonable tbh...I'm too lazy.
Can we use dotpoints to answer questions in chem?!Chem + Phys (and I'm guessing Bio): Know the dotpoints, whenever you see a question, know what you're going to write before you put pen to paper - don't use the shotgun approach and verbally spray shit everywhere. Use dotpoints if you want. Once you know your theory, apply it to past paper questions. If you do every single HSC paper properly from 02-10, I guarantee that you will get 85+ for Phys and Chem.
Clearly, what I mean by 'dotpoints' is full sentences, but in dotpoint form to make it easier for the marker to discern stuffEthanol is an ambivalent material yada yada yada
+ renewable
+ burns cleanly
+ greenhouse neutral
- pollution
- fucks with engines
- smelly wastes and large use of lands
Clearly, Answer B did a lot better than Answer A, although they pretty much mentioned the same thing.– ADVANTAGES of ethanol:
+ It is a renewable resource because of _____
+ It is “greenhouse” neutral; that is, the CO2 absorbed by the crop (e.g. corn) can match by the CO2 produced by combustion (if very efficient).
+ Because ethanol has less carbon than octane (the major component of petrol), as well as the fact it already contains an oxygen atom, it requires less oxygen to completely combust; hence it is a CLEANER and MORE EFFICIENT fuel.
+ Produces only carbon dioxide and water as a by-product (complete combustion)
– DISADVANTAGES of ethanol:
- Engines must be modified to run on fuel containing more than 20% ethanol, as was the case in _____ where they once tried it and failed spectacularly because of ____
- Engines wear down faster due to the need for higher engine compression ratios needed for ethanol combustion because of _____
- Large areas of land are required to grow crops that will be harvested for ethanol production; land that can be used for other purposes.
- Disposal of fermentation wastes presents major environmental issues such as _____ and ____