10. What happens in class the next day,or whenever this assignment is discussed,will give you some check on whether you found the important points.If the teacher spends a lot of time on a part of the text you didn't mark at all,probably you guessed wrong.Get yourself a red pencil and mark the teacher's points.You can make these changes during the study time you have set aside for comparing class notes with the textbook. 11.One word of warning:don't underline everything you read.If you mark too much,the important material won't stand out,and you will be just as confused as if you had not marked anything at all
10. What happens in class the next day, or whenever this assignment is discussed, will give you some check on whether you found the important points. If the teacher spends a lot of time on a part of the text you didn’t mark at all, probably you guessed wrong. Get yourself a red pencil and mark the teacher’s points. You can make these changes during the study time you have set aside for comparing class notes with the textbook. 11. One word of warning: don’t underline everything you read. If you mark too much, the important material won’t stand out, and you will be just as confused as if you had not marked anything at all
12.The third rule useful to everybody is don't let tests terrify you.If you have kept up in all your classes,if you have compared your class notes with your texts,if you have kept all your quizzes and gone over your errors,if you have underlined the important parts of each chapter intelligently,the chances are good that you can answer any questions the teacher will ask. 13. Being fairly sure that you can answer all the questions, however,is not the same thing as answering them.Nothing is more frustrating than freezing up during an important test. knowing all the answers but getting so excited at the sight of the test that half of what you actually know never gets written down
12. The third rule useful to everybody is don’t let tests terrify you. If you have kept up in all your classes, if you have compared your class notes with your texts, if you have kept all your quizzes and gone over your errors, if you have underlined the important parts of each chapter intelligently, the chances are good that you can answer any questions the teacher will ask. 13. Being fairly sure that you can answer all the questions, however, is not the same thing as answering them. Nothing is more frustrating than freezing up during an important test, knowing all the answers but getting so excited at the sight of the test that half of what you actually know never gets written down