Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Education and training - The college entrance examination is coming soon. How come I don't know anything about what I'm learning, and I can't understand what the teacher said? Thank god, help me.
The college entrance examination is coming soon. How come I don't know anything about what I'm learning, and I can't understand what the teacher said? Thank god, help me.
How to study today you asked me how to study. If you mean reading textbooks and getting high marks, I don't think I'm qualified to answer, because I didn't do well in high school and I sprinted to enter Normal University before the college entrance examination. However, I think maybe this sprint experience can be used for your reference. I think there must be a dead end in my mind, because when I study, there are often some things that I just can't get in. In this case, I will never learn by rote, but turn the confrontation into a war of attrition. The way is to write down the key points that you can't memorize on the side of the textbook, read them quickly before each reading, and let those words flash through your mind, just like installment payment. After a month, you will naturally remember them, which is better than that kind of rote learning. I also remember things in a homophonic way, starting from junior high school. Many students use this method. For example, "danger" is "danger". "University" is "a university for you to play for four years". For example, when I recited ten second-class ports along the Yangtze River, I only used one sentence: "Zhenyuan usually kills 10,000 people in September", which means "the political situation is unstable, and the number of people killed in September and autumn is often as high as 10,000". Although the sentence is unreasonable, I can still remember "Zhenjiang, Wuhu, Anqing, Jiujiang, Yueyang, Changsha and Changde" today. Shashi, Yichang, Wanxian ",some people were greatly surprised and called me a" computer ". I'm afraid I used a special reading method. If you look in my bookshelf, you will find a big bag of "Chinese characters". Taking notes with small pieces of paper and setting words to help me remember are the methods I still use. For example, in the near future, I learned Han Daoheng's Cao Baiji Yunsong in the Ming Dynasty. Because of the great difference between cursive script and regular script, many words are not easy to remember. I make them into square characters, write regular script on the front and cursive script on the back, put one in my pocket and touch it out at any time. When you see regular script, you want to write cursive script. When you see it, you can tell. It is also more effective. In addition, the ancients also had a so-called "trick sentence", which wrote the inspiration of daily life on a small piece of paper, put the trick in first, and then take it out when you are free, so that the inspiration of the fragments can be assembled into a big chapter. I also use this method. Whenever I am inspired, I will write it on the back of my notebook or business card and concentrate it in one place, although it may take me a year or two to sort it out. However, in this way, I can actually write seven books, Windows of Fireflies and Lighting a Heart Lamp, in spite of my busy schedule. If I don't know how to catch every little inspiration and let it fly, how can I have these achievements? One more thing, in this era of knowledge explosion, you will find that you can't finish reading books, but you need extensive knowledge when you study, so you must know how to organize complex materials. When you buy a book, even if you don't have time to read it carefully, you should look through the preface and table of contents. When you encounter a problem, you can recall that you read relevant information in a book and find what you need. Similarly, encyclopedias, dictionaries, dictionaries, botany dictionaries, sentence dictionaries, classics dictionaries, chronologies of world history and maps are also necessary. Even books like National Geographic magazine are of great reference value because of their rich information. For the convenience of retrieval, you can also buy a catalogue for decades. The New York Times Yearbook, which is a collection of all kinds of important news (PageOne) and encyclopedias, is also very useful. In short, the book is dead when printed, but the human brain is alive. You must use the most effective language and methods to input these dead materials into your brain. And put these materials around you, just like a computer disk, waiting for you to insert them at any time and sort out what you want!