Study Tips For Introductory Physics Students
Study Tips For Introductory Physics Students
Study Tips For Introductory Physics Students
Compiled and edited by Dan Styer, Oberlin College Physics Department; http://www.oberlin.edu/physics/dstyer/StudyTips.html; last updated 27 November 2007. This World Wide Web page gives tips that Oberlin College Physics faculty have found useful for their students, particularly for students in introductory physics courses. If you have suggestions, please inform the compiler. Following these tips and suggestions will take more time and effort than does a casual reading of the text, but they will pay off in a savings of time when you do the problems, in a better understanding of physics, and in increased confidence on exams.
General tips
Keep up with the course. Once you fall behind it is very difficult to catch up. If you ignore this advice and do fall behind (it happens to the best of us sometimes), and if you cannot manufacture the time to do a thorough job of catching up, then skim the passed-over course material for its most important points and move on to a thorough study of the current course material. Attempting a thorough study of last week's material usually results in being one week behind for the entire semester. Do the reading before attending the lectures. This way way you won't need to take notes on everything the lecturer says, because you will already understand some of the material and you will know that some of it is treated well in your textbook. If you follow this advice, then you can use the lecture for what lecture is good at: asking questions, following the demonstrations, discovering how this week's material fits into the overall structure of the course, and gaining a conceptual understanding of the material under study. At the same time you can use the text for what text is good at: presenting derivations and sample problems, and getting the details right. Devote a little time to studying physics each day, rather than a large amount of time once a week: this allows the material to sink in. Make some friends in the course and work through the material in small groups. Use these groups for discussion, problem suggestions, and companionship. Throw ideas into the group's "pot" as well as drawing ideas from it. Do not use your study group as a crutch. Attend the course's conference sessions to learn informal techniques that are not well-taught through the lecture method. Do not memorize. In almost all cases, the temptation to memorize indicates a simple a lack of understanding. In the words of Charles Misner: "The equation F = ma is easy to memorize, hard to use, and even more difficult to understand."
Take notes in your book. Mark the most important points and record why they are important. The act of deciding what is important is the first step in turning reading from passive pageturning into active, aggressive--and rewarding--penetration. (Some students take notes by highlighting with a yellow marker. This is all right, but don't fall into the trap of highlighting everything in your book!) Examine the sample problems carefully. If the reading is too dense, try skimming it once to get an overview of what's going on, then coming back and reading in detail the second time. The active, aggressive reading advocated here is very time-consuming. Reserve it for the most important parts of your textbook. You might be able to get your teacher to list for you the most important sections, or you might have to decide for yourself.
Sometimes the problem statement will give you more information than is needed to answer the question. Sometimes it will give you less information than is needed, and ask you not for an answer but for a list of the unknown information required to find an answer. Sometimes the problem will be a short narrative from which you need to extract relevant information. Students often find such problems exasperating, but in fact they develop an important problem-solving skill called building a mathematical model. Problems that arise in the world outside of your textbook usually come with more or less data present than needed to solve the problem. The ability to recognize which data are needed and which are irrelevant is an important practical skill. Review your problem solutions when they are returned (or when model solutions are handed out). Why did you make the mistakes you did? How could you have avoided them? This review should be quick (after all, you have new material piling up) but five or ten minutes spent in this review can save hours by preventing similar mistakes in the future. More suggestions are available in the page Solving Problems in Physics.
Weaknesses
If you need help with mathematical background, consult either Arthur Beiser, Essential Math for the Sciences (McGraw-Hill, New York, 1969), or Daniel Kleppner and Norman Ramsey, Quick Calculus (Wiley, New York, 1985), or Colin Adams, Joel Hass, and Abigail Thompson, How to Ace Calculus: The Streetwise Guide (Freeman, San Francisco, 1998). Guard against the two most common failings: reliance on memorization and on "plug and chug" problem technique.