#math hack
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Parenthesis
Exponent
Multiply
Divide
Add
Subtract
Take first letter of each, make an acronym. Reword acronym into a phrase you can remember.
Weird acronyms source: https://www.mathnasium.com/hinsdale/news/how-does-pemdas-work; pick one you can remember and can't easily re-word into the wrong acronym.
NOW THE CORRECT ONE WHAT IS
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#What to do if Archimedes Won’t Stop Talking About Parabolas#tips#tricks#life hacks#helpful hints#advice#Archimedes#mathematics#math#parabola
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Tip for my fellow students with dyscalculia: use different colors to distinguish what you are doing. Everyone’s different but this has helped me a lot.
#mathematics#math#mathblr#math tips#school#school tips#life hacks for college students#college life#college#university#high school#middle school#junior high school
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God dammit, frankly- (Yes, this post is about Prodigy.)
#Oh to make a rom hack of an elementary school game 💔#Me when the autism takes over#prodigy math game#prodigy game#hyperfixation#hyperfixating#hyperfixations#aspiring game dev#rom hack#game mod
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27 Exam strategies from 'Cracking the GRE Premium Edition with 6 Practice Tests, 2020' which can also become life tips
As you become more familiar with the test, you will also develop a sense of “the ETS mentality.” This is a predictable kind of thinking that influences nearly every part of nearly every ETS exam. By learning to recognize the ETS mentality, you’ll earn points even when you aren’t sure why an answer is correct. You’ll inevitably do better on the test by learning to think like the people who wrote it.
You’ll do better on the GRE by putting aside your feelings about real education and surrendering yourself to the strange logic of the standardized test.
You might be surprised to learn that the GRE isn’t written by distinguished professors, renowned scholars, or graduate school admissions officers. For the most part, it’s written by ordinary ETS employees, sometimes with freelance help from local graduate students. You have no reason to be intimidated.
Our focus is on the basic concepts that will enable you to attack any problem, strip it down to its essential components, and solve it in as little time as possible.
In many ways, taking a standardized test is a skill and, as with any skill, you can become more proficient at it by both practicing and following the advice of a good teacher.
Think of your GRE preparation as if you were practicing for a piano recital or a track meet; you wouldn’t show up at the concert hall or track field without having put in hours of practice beforehand (at least we hope you wouldn’t!). If you want to get a good score on the GRE, you’ll have to put in the necessary preparation time.
After all, the GRE leaves you no room to make explanations or justifications for your responses.
However, the difficulty of an individual question plays no role in determining your score; that is, your score is calculated by your performance on the entirety of the scored sections, not just a handful of the hardest questions on a given section.
This strategy is called Take the Easy Test First. Skip early and skip often.
On your first pass through the questions, if you see a question you don’t like, a question that looks hard, or a question that looks time consuming, you’re going to walk on by and leave it for the end.
Sometimes, however, a question that looks easy turns out to be more troublesome than you thought. The question may be trickier than it first appeared, or you may have simply misread it, and it seems hard only because you’re working with the wrong information.
Over four hours, your brain is going to get tired.
Once you read a question wrong, however, it is almost impossible to un-read that and see it right. As long as you are still immersed in the question, you could read it 10 times in a row and you will read it the same wrong way each time.
Whether a question is harder than it first appeared, or made harder by the fact that you missed a key phrase or piece of information, the approach you’ve taken is not working.
Reset your brain by walking away from the problem, but mark the question before you do. Do two or three other questions, and then return to the marked problem. When you walk away, your brain doesn’t just forget the problem, it keeps on processing in the background. The distraction of the other questions helps your brain to consider the question from other angles. When you return to the problem, you may find that the part that gave you so much trouble the first time is now magically clear. If the problem continues to give you trouble, walk away again.
Staying with a problem when you’re stuck burns time but yields no points. You might spend two, three, five, or even six minutes on a problem but still be no closer to the answer.
In the five minutes you spend on a problem that you’ve misread, you could nail three or four easier questions. When you return to the question that gave you trouble, there is a good chance that you will spot your error, and the path to the correct answer will become clear. If it doesn’t become clear, walk away again. Any time you encounter resistance on the test, do not keep pushing; bend like a reed and walk away
You should take the easy test first and you should spend most of your time on questions that you know how to answer, or are reasonably certain you can answer.
As a result, it’s better to guess than it is to leave a question blank. At least by guessing, you stand a chance at getting lucky and guessing correctly.
In fact, sometimes it is easier to identify the wrong answers and eliminate them than it is to find the right ones,
Trap answers are specifically designed to appeal to test takers. Oftentimes, they’re the answers that seem to scream out “pick me!” as you work through a question. However, these attractive answers are often incorrect.
Get into the habit of double-checking all of your answers before you click on your answer choice
The only way to reliably avoid careless errors is to adopt habits that make them less likely to occur.
Every time you begin a new section, focus on that section and put the last section you completed behind you. Don’t think about that pesky synonym from an earlier section while a geometry question is on your screen. You can’t go back, and besides, your impression of how you did on a section is probably much worse than reality.
The week before the test is not the time for any major life changes. This is NOT the week to quit smoking, start smoking, quit drinking coffee, start drinking coffee, start a relationship, end a relationship, or quit a job. Business as usual, okay?
Before you dive in, you might wish to take one of the practice tests in this book or online to get a sense of where you are starting from.
Accuracy is better than speed. Slow down and focus on accumulating as many points as possible. Forcing yourself to work faster results in careless errors and lower scores.
#Exam Preparation#Study Hacks#Time Management#Note-Taking#Study Schedule#Exam Day Tips#Practice Tests#Study Motivation#Overcoming Test Anxiety#Effective Revision#GRE#GRE Tips#GRE Preparation#GRE Practice Tests#GRE Verbal#GRE Quantitative#GRE Analytical Writing#GRE Study Plan#GRE Test Day#GRE Resources#GRE Flashcards#ETS (Educational Testing Service)#ETS GRE#ETS Practice Material#ETS Official Guides#ETS Test Dates#ETS Online Resources#ETS Registration Tips#ETS Analytical Writing Tips#ETS Math Tips
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Today i went to the german registration office and it was one of the most kafkaesque experiences of my life. One more Annoying Thing is done.
4/30 days of productivity— what is your best study tip or strategy?
Go back to basics. You can do all those flashcard and methods and super fast learning techniques, but you can’t get past the fact that you gotta READ the whole material at some point. So, just start with that, and THINK while you read. Come up with examples or real world applications for theoretical things. Try to disprove what you are reading, try to find exceptions and imprecisions. Read critically.
And when doing math, instead of trying to learn things by heart, look at and understand (at least intuitively) the proof, so it stops seeming like some alien monstrosity, it will appear as just another logical conclusion.
#my things#studies#studyblr#university#math#study hacks#study habits#30btu#30 days of productivity#productivity challenge#germanyposting
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Dumb story time!
so I live in madison wisconsin, and at the terrace, there are these special chairs known as terrace chairs.

^these guys^
Turns out there's been a problem with people stealing them, and in a magazine for the university the terrace belongs to, they said that if caught, a 50 dollar fine would ensue.
They wrote below that getting a terrace chair for yourself only cost 60 dollars.
Can anyone tell me why a literal minor understands the problem with this, whereas the people making this magazine don't?
Note that it only says if caught. They printed to all people who are associated with UW that it's quite literally cheaper to get caught for stealing then it is to pay for your own.
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Dunking on fictional losermen is fun and all but if you make it ooc then what is even the point. Mocking qualities you just made up that have no real basis in canon is dumb. At this point just make an oc with these qualities and make fun of them instead
#this post is about#shin tsukimi#“shin doesn't shower” “shin is bad at everything” can anyone hear me. it's so dark in here#like. shin washes his hands so much that he doesn't leave any traces of his fingers on a keyboard#and the things he's good at are literally the reason that sara doesn't kill him in logic route#he is only alive because he can help everyone escape!!!!! because there are things he's good at!!!!!!#also in some contexts I don't like people calling him stupid. like if you mean his social skills then yeah sure#but if you're talking about stuff related to math or puzzle solving it's like. that guy hacked asu-naro's security system#like I know he's a pathetic loser but he's got Some redeeming qualities
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my friend taught me this and I think it’s cool so I sent it
Om
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To all adults out there!!!!! Is there any oddly specific advice you would give to your teenage self? Could be a recipe you like. A cleaning hack. A motto you really like. What is something that made your day a little bit easier or more enjoyable?
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PyAmbush Kit Secure you server if you want - YouTube
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Listening to classical music while I do my math homework makes me feel like I’m saving the world with some kind of big brain mathematics.
#funny#idk#shitposting#shit post#classical music#old music#music#mathematics#math#math homework#pre calculus#school hacks#academic weapon
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No fucking way.
My (german) maths teacher asked me if I knew what Marauder means in German???
Like, yes bitch ofc I do!!!
#It was a device for hacking that he lent another teacher but still!!#He swerves off topic a lot that's why we're all failing maths <3#marauders#remus lupin#sirius black#james potter#peter pettigrew#the marauders map
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*hacks into the government databases to expose atrocities of capitalism and fascism to whoever is willing to look* girl math :3c
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you: the Banach–Tarski paradox me, an intellectual: tumblr infinite chocolate hack
#the mathematics fandom#the mathematicians fandom#math#mathematics#stage five meme#meme science#sorry this has been Haunting me I needed to get it out#mathblr#'tumblr infinite chocolate hack true actually (the shapes of the pieces are just wrong they need to be uncountable specks of dust)'#IS a hill I will die on#this is independent of my hill of 'Gojo deals with so much shit he deserves to exploit the Axiom of Choice to have irl infinite chocolate'#I have been making this joke internally for years#but that is another hill I will die on
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Source: Cracking the GRE Premium Edition with 6 Practice Tests, 2020 All the best to everyone for your upcoming exams
#GRE#GRE Math#Percentage#Decimal#Fraction#Math Equivalents#Study Tips#Memorization#GRE Prep#Friendly Fractions#Exam Strategy#GRE Quantitative#Percent-Decimal Conversion#Decimal-Fraction Conversion#Test Prep#GRE Success#Math Hacks#Quick Math#GRE Percentages#Simplified Math#Answer Elimination#Problem Solving#Test Day Tips#GRE Shortcuts#GRE Study Guide#Math Memory#Percent Conversions#Decimal Conversions#Fraction Conversions#Quantitative Reasoning
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